How Hitler Ruined the Reputation of the German Language 🇩🇪 | Feli from Germany

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  • Опубліковано 1 тра 2024
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    ▸"German always sounds angry and aggressive." That's a stereotype that many people around the world believe. But why is that? And what does the guy with the mustache have to do with it?
    Related links:
    The Only Secret Recording of Hitler's Normal Voice ▸ • The Only Secret Record...
    Bühnendeutsch ▸en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B%C3%BC...
    How German Sounds Compared To Other Languages || CopyCatChannel▸ • How German Sounds Comp...
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    ABOUT ME: Hallo, Servus, and welcome to my channel! My name is Felicia (Feli), I'm 28, and I'm a German living in the USA! I was born and raised in Munich, Germany but have been living in Cincinnati, Ohio off and on since 2016. I first came here for an exchange semester during my undergrad at LMU Munich, then I returned for an internship, and then I got my master's degree in Cincinnati. I was lucky enough to win the Green Card lottery and have been a permanent resident since 2019! In my videos, I talk about cultural differences between America and Germany, things I like and dislike about living here, and other topics I come across in my everyday life in the States. Let me know what YOU would like to hear about in the comments below. DANKE :)
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 7 тис.

  • @FelifromGermany
    @FelifromGermany  Рік тому +753

    Hey guys, here are two things that I forgot to mention in the video that I'd like to add! :)
    Annotation 1: [I was actually going to mention this in the video and wrote it down in my notes too but then I totally forgot when I wrote the script and didn’t notice it until I saw all of your comments just now. This fits in right at around 13:18 .] Bands like Rammstein use this style of speaking, including the overly rolled R, in their music to this day in combination with other stylistic elements that create somewhat of a “Nazi aesthetic”. The band is known to be politically anti-fascist though and seems to use this style mainly to provoke.
    Annotation 2: I should have mentioned in this context again that there are many regional dialects in Germany (mainly in the South) as well as in other German-speaking countries where people use the rolled R in their normal, everyday speech. However, they don’t use it in the same overly expressive way as Hitler did, and -- with exception of Swiss German -- these dialects don’t usually stress the Rs at the end of words either.

    • @m.u.550
      @m.u.550 Рік тому +30

      Great Video! Danke Feli, so ein Video war wirklich überfällig. Ich persönlich finde es auch nicht so witzig, wenn Comedians oder Schauspieler in Talkshows so sprechen. Du trägst einen guten Teil zur Völkerverständigung bei. Wunderbar und vielen Dank!

    • @Nekr0n35
      @Nekr0n35 Рік тому +15

      I would recommend adding this in a smaller part 2. A rammstein thumbnail would probably garantee clicks ;)

    • @HSAgaming
      @HSAgaming Рік тому +2

      So far with using the Kleo app and talking to Germans in real life, the “r” is almost always sounding like an English w noise except when its rolled like in bröt for example.

    • @iaincampbell6959
      @iaincampbell6959 Рік тому +4

      I was going to leave a separate comment but recently deleted it when I read this.
      I always thought the Deutsch language had sounded a bit aggressive but I just acknowledged as a unique characteristic to emphasize seriousness.
      But in song, it can be quite beautiful. As you said about Rammstein, there are songs of theirs like "Onhe Dich" and "Rotor Sand" that hardly have this aggressive tone.

    • @rumrunner8019
      @rumrunner8019 Рік тому +11

      When I thought of the German language as a teenager in the late 90s, I always thought not of an aggressive dictator, but of aggressive music. Ask anyone who was younger around the late 90s to early 2000s and liked rock to say something in German and they'll probably say this:
      *Du*
      *Du hast*
      *Du hast mich!*
      The band Rammstein was actually pretty big in the US among fans of metal and rock (and industrial) They added to the idea that German is an aggressive, masculine language.

  • @death4metal201
    @death4metal201 Рік тому +2355

    Imagine your country's reputation being ruined by a guy who wasn't even from it

    • @sheep3370
      @sheep3370 Рік тому

      ​@Liberals Are gross Ruined!

    • @worstcatapultkingplayer5810
      @worstcatapultkingplayer5810 Рік тому +366

      Hitler was ethnic German. Austria is a sister German country of Deustchland

    • @republitarian484
      @republitarian484 Рік тому

      As if the English, French, and Soviet Communist thugs were any better.

    • @iamryan767
      @iamryan767 Рік тому +163

      You mean improved it ?

    • @icxy_
      @icxy_ Рік тому +95

      In which world he ruined it?

  • @TonyLeva
    @TonyLeva 8 місяців тому +39

    To be fair, if you hear Mussolini speeches you’d think Italian is an aggressive language as well.

  • @user-gp6lw9on1v
    @user-gp6lw9on1v 8 місяців тому +142

    The German branches of my family kept their language for three generations after arriving in Wisconsin in the 1870s. As a child, it was a natural thing for us to hear German words interspersed with English. They also worshipped in German until the 1950s, and I have my grandmother's Bible and hymnals -- all in German, but printed in the US. So we learned not only to be proud of our ancestry, but to know it had no connection to the Nazi regime. Many thanks for debunking the myth!

    • @theoroth3669
      @theoroth3669 7 місяців тому +7

      Well said! Thank you from Germany

    • @xXTheoLinuxXx
      @xXTheoLinuxXx 3 місяці тому +5

      I'm Dutch, but when it comes to nazi's keep in mind that a lot of Germans weren't nazi's by choice but very afraid. I'm living next to the German border and there were 15 concentration camps (Emslandlager) were people kept prison if they were against them.

    • @emp0rizzle
      @emp0rizzle 3 місяці тому

      I'm Japanese but... 1930s Germany is the most interesting period for me. I collect Nazi memorabilia. I didn't get a chance to try Hitler Fried Chicken in Thailand.

    • @silverbullet2008bb
      @silverbullet2008bb 2 місяці тому +2

      @@xXTheoLinuxXx The Americans had camps for a a certain subset of their population who they also happened to be at war with. The British did the same in the Boer war. It is sometimes necessary in wartime to intern possible subversives/enemy populations. The only difference in Germany was that towards the end of the war when the whole of Germany was starving and disease ridden these conditions also manifested in the camps. People generally died from starvation and typhus, not from being forced to inhale a delousing agent. Hmm..a delousing agent in camps where typhus spread by ticks was endemic.

    • @hobertlee7598
      @hobertlee7598 2 місяці тому +1

      My Mother Family Line Comes From Northern Germany,A Really Long Time Ago,,,,,

  • @jiros00
    @jiros00 8 місяців тому +45

    I notice that, in German, each word is very clearly demarcated and fully pronounced (even within compound words) unlike other languages where words elide. In Spanish a whole sentence can become a word in effect when spoken. This German demarcation can sound aggressive to some. It's actually a joy to those learning German as a foreign language. It's easier to understand Germans.

    • @theoroth3669
      @theoroth3669 7 місяців тому +1

      Well noticed.. greatings from Germany ;)

    • @rob21
      @rob21 7 місяців тому

      There are some studies on the Internet that show Spanish is the fastest spoken (European) language while German is the slowest. That probably helps too.

    • @carriebryan1211
      @carriebryan1211 5 місяців тому

      Elision is rare in German but not entirely unknown. When I'm in Germany, I like to mess with people's heads by using the one elision I know, in a very colloquial sentence: "Ich hab' kein Deutsch" (I can't speak German).

    • @davidvanwagoner9027
      @davidvanwagoner9027 2 місяці тому

      My wife learned French in school. When we were stationed along the border and listening to a French radio station she had great difficulty separating the words. Whereas, she thought German to be easier because she could distinguish between them.

    • @ag4444
      @ag4444 2 місяці тому +1

      not sure why you would say that about spanish. in french one sentence can become one word. spanish is so easy because you can clearly differentiate between every word, same with german.

  • @joemiller9931
    @joemiller9931 Рік тому +360

    I'm an American that studied German for 11 years- from 7th grade through college. Many times I have heard non-German speakers say "German sounds so angry." My reply- When did you ever hear German being spoken other than Hitler giving a speech or a German officer barking out orders to his troops in a movie? One person replied back- "I've never really thought about it that way." I said German can be very smooth and soft especially if a pretty girl is talking in a calm voice. I am vindicated!

    • @amiquigonzales7917
      @amiquigonzales7917 Рік тому +17

      You are right but ..... that's something the rest of the world has only heard of: Hitler yelling in his German speeches . Sorry but that's how it is. It's like knowing that the stereotype of Mexicans was dark-skinned fellows wearing Sombreros and taking a nap out in the open on a sunny afternoon (by the way am South American but that's how international people, especially Americans, sees Latin Americans). I have to say as well that, being us all mixed-blood people, with strong healthy native American ancestors, those theories of inferior races absolutely scandalized our societies during WW2 and to know their Final Solution was to kill all non-white populations..... Guess why here usually average people born 1930/1970 feared Germans.

    • @johanderuiter9842
      @johanderuiter9842 Рік тому

      The world is not allowed to hear Hitler's speeches.. You will only find a few clips on UA-cam. Because what he said makes perfect sense, but doesn't suit those still in power today. The Hitler ranting and raving image is a carefully crafted image created by 80 years of uncontested anglo-saxon propaganda/media to ridicule and stigmatise.

    • @pep590
      @pep590 Рік тому +4

      True. Sounds angry is really racist.

    • @m.syamil_KR4PU
      @m.syamil_KR4PU Рік тому +2

      Well, have you seen the angry german kid video ? 😂

    • @thomasfatty8776
      @thomasfatty8776 Рік тому +6

      @@amiquigonzales7917 Danke!
      ich bin kein Denker und kein Dichter , sometimes i think english is schlichter !
      doch würde ich es niemals wagen , zu sagen , das meine deutsche Sprache einfach ist!
      so ist es nicht!
      doch jeder Fremde , der sie sprechen kann , ....es lernen will von Anfang an!
      der sei Willkommen jederzeit !
      Doch machst Du Stress und bist ein Räuber , dann beruf ich mich auf Stoiber!

  • @heaththeemissary3824
    @heaththeemissary3824 Рік тому +556

    You have a rare talent for presenting culture in its historical context and within the larger world perspective. Growing up in America, the only German I heard was my grandfather and his siblings trading the fragments they remembered from their parents, (a jumble of Black Forest (High Alemannic?) and Swabian). It was a light language with a musical quality to my ear. I now understand how so many people have the impression of German being aggressive and dour. Thanks for being such a wonderful ambassador of German culture and language.

    • @frontenac5083
      @frontenac5083 Рік тому +6

      *its

    • @wora1111
      @wora1111 Рік тому +11

      @@frontenac5083 Using autocompletion with different languages tends to raise the number of typos, especially for older people on mobile devices

    • @joem3999
      @joem3999 Місяць тому

      She has a very common talent for revisionist apologetic nonsense. If she were alive then she would have been an aspiring Eva Braun.

    • @muhammedjaseemshajeef6781
      @muhammedjaseemshajeef6781 2 дні тому

      Are you proud of being german?

  • @Paradise-on-Earth
    @Paradise-on-Earth 7 місяців тому +72

    I'm a German and felt sad because of our language being so harshly jugded. I NEVER thought about Hitler, maybe having ruined the reputation! So that is a huge Aha- moment, thank you very much! Hitler was terrible in so many ways. Even in speaking.

    • @rjadolf6782
      @rjadolf6782 6 місяців тому +4

      Lots of us like german because the strong way it sounds lol... I think the guy from Rammstein also rolls the r quite heavily when he sings.

    • @IbarraAlejandro
      @IbarraAlejandro 4 місяці тому +3

      ​@@rjadolf6782 as an argie i love German language its beautiful and sounds strong too l love it we have germans living here even some surnames in Argentina are germans :)

    • @xXTheoLinuxXx
      @xXTheoLinuxXx 3 місяці тому +2

      It sounds harsh because it's an old language compared to other languages in Europe. Modern languages produces sounds which are more from the mouth area. I don't judge your language und ich könnte es sogar sprechen oder schreiben (Ich komme aus Die Niederlande) :)

    • @yes_24
      @yes_24 3 місяці тому +3

      True. He really ruined the perspective of other people from other countries on the view of germany itself. The worst part is that people still hate germany or have a bad view on the country itself just because of ww2 and hitler.

    • @WRNWRW
      @WRNWRW 2 місяці тому +1

      he cared about Germans at least, now you got the Jew and millions of Muslim immigrants, is it better??

  • @FranciscoMartinez-369
    @FranciscoMartinez-369 6 місяців тому +49

    I'm surprised by how much research you put into this, and by how much I actually learned. Awesome work.

    • @GenderDenier
      @GenderDenier 2 місяці тому

      What you call research is historical fairy tales. Watch "Europe The Last Battle" for a glimpse of genuine history.

  • @aMOOSEing
    @aMOOSEing Рік тому +858

    As a German who studied Linguistics and Communication Science this video makes me so happy! Love how you make such detailed aspects of spoken language, speaking trends and their effects known and connect them to today's perception of the German language! 💪

    • @daisyXOXOXO
      @daisyXOXOXO Рік тому +5

      +1

    • @76arga
      @76arga Рік тому +2

      You have developed very communicatively, but your Polish is very poor.

    • @WojtekBordin
      @WojtekBordin Рік тому +3

      Could'nt agree more!

    • @PlottingMax
      @PlottingMax Рік тому

      German sounds so barbaric, and you people will never be able to fix all the damage you made during both world wars, world will never forget

    • @henningbartels6245
      @henningbartels6245 Рік тому +6

      @@76arga what Polish? Don't get it.

  • @pedroemn
    @pedroemn Рік тому +236

    Ich bin Brasilianer und habe Deutsch selbst gelernt, am meisten durch Duolingo und UA-cam-Videos. Ich arbeite als Uber-Fahrer und benutze eine deutsche Stimme auf meinem Waze, und viele Leute haben mich gefragt ob es Französisch wäre. Sie werden fast immer überrascht wenn ich sage, dass es Deutsch ist.

    • @nahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh777
      @nahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh777 Рік тому +33

      Oh ich kann das lesen!!! Mein Deutsch wird besser!!!

    • @cygnos6201
      @cygnos6201 Рік тому +17

      Entschuldigen sie die Frage aber was ist eine Waze? Trotzdem Kompliment zu ihrem deutsch. Dieses ist sehr gut, wie ich zugeben muss.

    • @pedroemn
      @pedroemn Рік тому +17

      @@cygnos6201 Waze ist der GPS-App. Und danke fürs Kompliment 😊

    • @pablogtg9990
      @pablogtg9990 Рік тому +2

      Hallo, Mann. Ich bin auch Brasilianer. Woher kommen Sie? Lb aus Niterói, Rio de Janeiro.

    • @MenezarianDuck
      @MenezarianDuck Рік тому +1

      ich esse Kartoffel

  • @dreamerjazz352
    @dreamerjazz352 9 місяців тому +114

    There was a time when I was deeply interested in WW2 because of videogames I was playing, then learning about it at school and watching documentaries at home made me more interested in the topic, it made me tune into the German language a bit more. I obviously new about the harsh sounding speeches, but I actually didn't think of the German language that way. I remember seeing movies and documentaries where the language was spoken regularly and for some reason I loved the sound of German, I don't even know why, I just like it. I speak Spanish and I've heard many languages, but for some reason, German really stands out to me. It's a precise sounding language and I just love how the vowels and consonants sound. I don't know, it's a very impressive language.

    • @vampiricagorist6979
      @vampiricagorist6979 7 місяців тому +9

      I feel the same way. German is a fun language to speak. The way I describe it is that it’s a good tasting language.

    • @dreamerjazz352
      @dreamerjazz352 7 місяців тому +6

      @@vampiricagorist6979 That is indeed a good way to describe it! Yeah, it taste good!

    • @valerietaylor9615
      @valerietaylor9615 7 місяців тому +2

      I think German sounds beautiful, although few people seem to agree with me.

    • @megandarling2215
      @megandarling2215 6 місяців тому +1

      ⁠@@dreamerjazz352dude we are the same omg bro 😎 😧😂😅this happen to me too this was the same thing that happened to you

    • @nicomaniatutoriales6033
      @nicomaniatutoriales6033 6 місяців тому +3

      Concuerdo contigo aunque muchas personas no estén de acuerdo, para mi suena muy fino y no todo el tiempo están gritando

  • @richardabbot4695
    @richardabbot4695 6 місяців тому +38

    I have been trying to learn German for years. It is an extremely difficult language to learn and living in Australia doesn't make it any easier. I work with a German lady and she said my German is not so bad but she is an extremely nice lady and probably thinks she'll hurt my feelings. Anyway i love your videos. Please keep going. ❤

    • @robertab929
      @robertab929 6 місяців тому +10

      If you think than German is difficult than try any of Slavic languages (Polish, Czech, Croatian, Ukrainian, for example) or Chinese, Korean, Japanese.
      There was assessment done which languages are difficult for English speakers. Languages were divided in 5 categories from easiest to more difficult to learn. Here are some examples:
      (1, easiest) -- Languages closely related to English: Afrikaans, Danish, Dutch, French, Italian, Norwegian, Portuguese, Romanian, Spanish, Swedish.
      (2) -- Languages similar to English: German
      (3) -- Languages with linguistic and/or cultural differences from English: Indonesian, Malaysian, Swahili
      (4) -- Languages with significant linguistic and/or cultural differences from English: Albanian, Amharic, Armenian, Azerbaijani, Bengali, Bosnian, Bulgarian, Burmese, Croatian, Czech, Estonian, Finnish, Georgian, Greek, Hebrew, Hindi, Icelandic, Khmer, Lao, Latvian, Lithuanian, Macedonian, Mongolian, Nepali, Pashto, Persian, Polish, Russian, Serbian, Sinhala, Slovak, Slovenian, Taqaloq, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, Urdu, Uzbek, Vietnamese, Xhosa, Zulu.
      (5) -- Languages which are exceptionally difficult for native English speakers:
      Arabic, Cantonese (Chinese), Madarin (Chinese), Japanese, Korean.

    • @Akukawasaki
      @Akukawasaki 5 місяців тому +3

      ​@@robertab929 Interesting. Though my japanese is just kind of advanced beginner, I found it to be quite an easy language to learn compared to what I know of german, spanish, french, finnish and whatever. The grammar and pronunciation seem very clean and simple to me. Seems like the simplicity of english grammar but also with consistent easy pronunciation too.
      Perhaps the big challenge that many refer to is learning the thousands of kanji characters one must know in order to read and write fluently. For context, english is my native language, though I grew up learning some finnish because of family (definitely a complex language imo) and am sort of fluent now, and have been slowly learning german for the last year or two.

    • @sayyamzahid7312
      @sayyamzahid7312 5 місяців тому

      ​@@Akukawasaki13:22 🎉❤

    • @frankmunster1566
      @frankmunster1566 4 місяці тому

      ​​@@robertab929 I totally agree that English and German are closely related. I am a German native speaker, I speak English and a little french and Spanish.
      And I doubt, that eg french is closer to English than German. There are so many words, that are at least similar in German and English. French is totally different. And even the concept of Du and Sie (being polite) used to be just alike in English maybe 150 years ago. Eg "Du singst" (you sing) was then something like "thou singst"...

    • @robertab929
      @robertab929 4 місяці тому +2

      @@frankmunster1566 There is this order English-Frisian-Dutch-German with languages in the middle being understand better than at extreme positions. So you as German/English speaker may also understand a lot of Frisian and Dutch.
      French is different than other Romance languages. This is caused by Frankish (Germanic) influences in 6.-10. c. Spelling and pronunciation of born Old French was different than earlier Vulgar Latin from 5. c.
      English has Germanic roots (Lower German/Saxon root with some Old Norse influence). Plus many Romance words because of Norman invasion in 11.-13. c.
      English has ~26% words of Germanic origin and 58% of Romance origin (29% French and 29% from other Romance language like Latin, Italian). Problems in English with lack of correlation between writing and pronunciation are caused by Norman French influence.

  • @Wifgargfhaurh
    @Wifgargfhaurh 11 місяців тому +82

    I remember 9th grade German class, the teacher asked the worst student in the class "how do you say ____" and he replied "probably a lot of spitting and yelling". I couldnt hold in my laughter, even though the teacher was obviously not happy with that comment.

  • @khausere7
    @khausere7 Рік тому +131

    I opted to take German as a ninth-grader in my school system in Indiana (around 1980). That was the first year German was offered, alongside French and Spanish which had been in the curriculum for years. On the first day, our teacher (Herr Kinnard) had us memorize a little song that I remember to this day, and it first opened my eyes and ears to how melodic the language can be. Hopefully I'm spelling the words correctly: "O, wie woll, ist mir am abend, mir am abend, wenn zuruh, die Glocken leuten, Glocken leuten, bing, bong, bing, bong." Translated roughly as, "In the evening, I feel at ease when I hear the bells ring." Danke, Herr Kinnard.

    • @mannmanuel7762
      @mannmanuel7762 Рік тому +10

      It's oh wie wohl, not woll. But the rest is (small and big letters put aside) correct

    • @M11TS
      @M11TS Рік тому

      @@mannmanuel7762 Die Glocken lEuten means The Bells People. It MUST be: Die Glocken lÄuten - the Bells ringing.

    • @susella646
      @susella646 Рік тому +1

      @@M11TS Pedant ... 😜

    • @richardpucci6771
      @richardpucci6771 Рік тому

      wonder how to hear this sung in German

    • @mannmanuel7762
      @mannmanuel7762 Рік тому

      @@M11TS didn't see that one

  • @BrianTRude
    @BrianTRude 6 місяців тому +5

    Hey Fili. When I was first posted to Schwabstadl Kasserne in 1981. They had a Headstart program to teach us enough German to get by. They taught us how to use the public transportation schedule, order a meal, etc.
    My post had about 350 Americans. And the rest was Luftwaffe support personell, for the 32nd Jagbomber Geschwader on Lechfeld Kasserne.
    They had a Mannschaftshiem on post, where we could get bier and a good Schnitzel dinner.
    So I started learning Bayrisch and Swabisch from the Luftwaffe troops that shared our post.
    One thing I've learned. Any people appreciate when you show an interest in learning about their language and culture. It's a great way to break the ice with anybody.
    Though it can be embarrassing when you mispronounce a word or phrase. And end up saying something completely different.
    My Luftwaffe friends wanted to know about me, and my life in America. I drew a picture of a pickup truck on a napkin. And said, "Was ist Das I'm Deutsche?" Das is einen Last Kraft Wagen. Oder LKW.
    I said Lust Kraft Wagen. It was quite embarrassing. Still they appreciated the fact that I was trying to learn their language.
    I was exposed to the Bayrisch culture along with learning the language. Much Gemudlikiet came with that. So to me, I always thought the Bayrisch and Swabisch dialects of the German language was really quite beautiful. Because there is much beauty in the culture and people of Germany.

  • @AM-cg2sg
    @AM-cg2sg 8 місяців тому +9

    I think German is a nice language to the ear. I spent a week in Germany and loved the German people and their language. Loved, loved, loved Germany.

  • @DinaTrageser
    @DinaTrageser Рік тому +136

    Bravo. I'm also a native German speaker in the US, and the caricaturization of German has bugged me for a long time. Your response is brilliant and so well done. Had no idea about Bühnendeutsch...! Wieder mal was gelernt. Vielen Dank!!

    • @yashiraeunicerodriguezmora1046
      @yashiraeunicerodriguezmora1046 Рік тому +1

      Yes, sorry, me too.🥺🥺🥺

    • @aaronfitzgerald9109
      @aaronfitzgerald9109 Рік тому +1

      I hate the German Schuldkultur!

    • @philw6056
      @philw6056 Рік тому +2

      Actually most languages have/had distinctive styles of speaking for public speeches, theater and movies. It's definitely a thing in english, too. You can hear it in most old recordings.
      Nowadays with better microphones it became less important, but actors in theaters still use it because they don't use microphones all the time. On the one hand movie actors tend to speak more normal than ever, on the other hand it's quite hard to understand some actors at all.

    • @irmadallam2728
      @irmadallam2728 Рік тому +1

      And surely it is not only hitler's Buehnendeutsch, but his horrible, evil actions that shaped the opinion about german language too.

  • @kenmorgan9528
    @kenmorgan9528 Рік тому +227

    Despite several years of studying German I always had difficulty understanding what Hitler was saying in those old newsreels. I chalked it up to the fact that he was Austrian and was basically shouting all the time. Thanks to this video, I now know he was using Buhnenaussprache, which I never knew of. Thanks for this.

    • @jessyanmeldung
      @jessyanmeldung 11 місяців тому +39

      Als Deutscher möchte ich dir sagen, es ist kein Verlust die Hitlerreden nicht zu verstehen.

    • @LukeLovesRose
      @LukeLovesRose 11 місяців тому +14

      Watch Europa The Last Battle

    • @gdok6088
      @gdok6088 11 місяців тому +10

      I looked Buhnenaussprachup and apparently it is considered to be "pure High German". So that's what Hitler spoke! It seems that pure High German sounds horrific too 🤢

    • @jessyanmeldung
      @jessyanmeldung 11 місяців тому +5

      @@gdok6088 Hallo. "Reines" Hochdeutsch spricht in Deutschland im Alltag wohl niemand. Bei Hitler war es nicht nur die Aussprache, er hatte auch einen sehr besonderen Sprach Rhythmus.

    • @gdok6088
      @gdok6088 11 місяців тому +3

      @@jessyanmeldung Hallo. Vielen Dank für diese hilfreiche Erklärung und Klarstellung.

  • @ErwinLepiarz
    @ErwinLepiarz 8 місяців тому +7

    I'm Polish. Your material was eyesoppening for my. Now I know why I have always disliked German. I must admit that Poles live in the past, especially the harm they received in WWII and that's why most of the things in the media that were related to your language were related to the dark period of your country and Adolf H. Great material, great research and exellent executed topic!

  • @michaelhoward142
    @michaelhoward142 3 місяці тому +1

    Very informative and interesting. Thank you so much for sharing your culture, knowledge and perspectives in such an enjoyable way. 🤗

  • @peterzenger5237
    @peterzenger5237 Рік тому +225

    As a German speaker and a linguist, I braced myself for the usual stereotypes but was most pleasantly surprised. Very well done! Anyone familiar with German literature, poetry, and song will know that language can be as beautiful as any. I also speak Japanese, which, again in part because of the war, is often judged to be somehow harsh and aggressive....Feli is clearly well trained in linguistics. Congratulations!

    • @anon8206
      @anon8206 Рік тому

      Wir sollten uns nicht um die Meinung von Ausländern kümmern.

    • @jcawly1
      @jcawly1 Рік тому +11

      Ich spreche auch Deutsch, und habe in Japan gelebt. Also, ich finde die beiden Sprache sehr schön. Die Sprache der Japanischen (Japanisch?) ist überhaupt nicht so “hart” wie man oft denkt, und die “Buchstaben/Logographen” sind sehr kompliziert, und dabei etwas “fremd” scheinen. (Mein Deutsch ist sehr rostig geworden. Schon seit 25 Jahren habe ich fast kein deutsch gesprochen, und die Wörter kommen mir nicht so schnell!)

    • @chazchoo99
      @chazchoo99 Рік тому +8

      @@jcawly1 I've been teaching myself German on and off for about 4 years now, and my little language win today was reading and being able to understand your comment. Vielen Dank für die Gelegenheit!

    • @jcawly1
      @jcawly1 Рік тому +2

      @@chazchoo99 gut dass du verstanden hast. Ich bin beeindruckt dass du selber deutsch lernst. Wie machst du denn? Mit einem App, oder?

    • @chazchoo99
      @chazchoo99 Рік тому +7

      @@jcawly1 Ich habe mit der App Duolingo anfangen, und Ich suchte online nach Grammatikfragen. Ich habe mir deutsche Shows und Filme angesehen (shout out to Dark!). Ich habe deutsche Musik gehört. Ich habe ein paar Videospiele auf Deutsch gespielt. Ich habe jedoch nicht viel Übung im Sprechen oder Schreiben. Ich möchte Deutschland eines Tages besuchen.

  • @michae8jackson378
    @michae8jackson378 Рік тому +242

    Feli I lived in Germany, mostly in Trier, 13 years. My ex wife is German, from Trier, and my two daughters and granddaughter live there. When my oldest came over to live for a while, she was in High School. She was very worried that Americans would treat her differently because she's German. She was worried that she would be called a Nazi because...German. I assured her that no that isn't the case. And it wasn't. She loved living here. Wichita, KS at the time. We live by the Space Center on the east coast of FL. HItlers performance art when he spoke publicly versus his private voice is dramtically different. But that's what he did, perform for the masses in his speeches. I love the language. I'm so happy I'm fluent.

    • @michae8jackson378
      @michae8jackson378 Рік тому +4

      @Max89PL exactly

    • @anttisaarilampi
      @anttisaarilampi Рік тому +11

      Trier is a beautiful town!

    • @michae8jackson378
      @michae8jackson378 Рік тому +11

      @Antti Saarilampi yes yes it is! Oldest city in Germany, settled by the Romans over 2000 years ago! Lots of ruins there. Truly beautiful city

    • @wWvwvV
      @wWvwvV Рік тому +3

      To Europeans, a fluent speaker is indistinguishable to native speakers. Even if you try, you can't ever get rid of your accent. I try this with Japanese.

    • @fermisparadox01
      @fermisparadox01 Рік тому +2

      @@max89pl64 what was that mustache all about tho. 😂

  • @amorinauman5017
    @amorinauman5017 9 місяців тому

    This was fascinating. Thank you for your thorough and informative videos!

  • @nomad1517
    @nomad1517 8 місяців тому +7

    I remember I took German in highschool. I loved it, unfortunately the class was full of immature kids who would constantly joke and mess around the entire time. Basically because it was extra credit. Our teacher was awesome. He was like Tom Hanks, and he was a great teacher. He would play Rammstein for us (before the controversy with till and the band) and he brought authentic chocolate and other snacks from Germany to us. It was a lot of fun. I'd love to visit the whole country one day. Stay for a couple of years just to really get a good taste of living in Germany and understand the culture. Not just learn on Rosetta stone.

  • @alinek265
    @alinek265 Рік тому +93

    Your video's timing is perfect!
    Just the day before yesterday, I was at an event for international students (I am currently studying in Canada). On the way back home I spoke to another German student in German.
    A guy overheard us and asked what language that was because he said it sounded so nice. I told him it was German and he first wouldn't believe me as he was convinced German sounds angry and harsh.
    It turned out he had seen some of these videos and assumed the words/sentences were pronounced normally just like they were in other languages. He didn't realize that this was not how German actually sounds like.
    I told him that every language sounds harsh when you pronounce it in an angry manner. Then, I pronounced some of the commonly ill-portrayed words such as Schmetterling, Krankenhaus, etc. in both an angry and my normal voice. He recognized the words when I spoke angrily and laughed.
    It made me a little sad that the idea of German being a harsh language is still very much present in people's minds and that this is something that some people wouldn't question.
    Later on, we had a long conversation about the German language and he showed genuine interest. Still, it was a little frustrating to learn that these videos (whether it be people pronouncing words in different languages or German sentences in talk shows) that are very common on social media make people dislike the German language without / before actually knowing how it really sounds like.
    While I somewhat get the comedic aspect of these videos, I also find it incredibly sad that they keep reinforcing stereotypes that are far from reflecting the reality.

    • @undeadwerewolves9463
      @undeadwerewolves9463 Рік тому +10

      Well for me as someone from England you can imagine what we were taught and shown in history class. That’s about all we learn about Germany unfortunately. I’ve been surrounded by the idea of this mysterious place called Germany all my life and I’ve finally over the past year and a half learned quite a lot about Germany and the language, because I was so curious that I wasn’t told everything there was to know. Low and behold I’m friends with a few Germans now and I adore the language and hearing them speak it. I do find videos ragging on the language funny too but I do feel for you guys when everyone assumes it just sounds evil. I think more exposure to modern German language and people would help peoples understanding. I’m glad many schools here teach French and German.

    • @hansmolders1066
      @hansmolders1066 Рік тому +3

      And then there are lovely local dialects like Kölsch! Lyrically flowing like a melody!

    • @thomasrinneberg7012
      @thomasrinneberg7012 Рік тому

      @@hansmolders1066 BAP!

    • @williammkydde
      @williammkydde Рік тому +2

      Yes, Aline. There is also, methinks, a tradition of poking fun at Germans and the German language. People in general like mocking any foreign accents; it's only human. Except that some jokes about some other nations or races would be politically incorrect, while the Germans seem to be "free game" bc of what happened 80 years ago. I heard people on CBC (I'm also in Canada) trying to mimick the German pronunciation in a grotesque way, bc they thought it funny - but they wouldn't dare do the same to the Chinese or Creol accent.

    • @har3036
      @har3036 Рік тому

      Don't worry, lots of people have the same opinion of the Dutch language.

  • @LyleFrancisDelp
    @LyleFrancisDelp Рік тому +167

    I've always loved German. In fact, growing up in Houston, while most everyone else was taking Spanish and French, I took German in junior high, high school, and college. (Alas, I've forgotten most, not having used it in many years.) I love the culture, the countryside, the food, the classical music, and the language.

    • @pablodelsegundo9502
      @pablodelsegundo9502 Рік тому +8

      Pretty much my situation in San Antonio, though I lived in (West) Germany for 3yrs as a kid. I was a German language nerd, did German Club, Pasz Auf team, Sprachfest, TAGS, etc.

    • @LyleFrancisDelp
      @LyleFrancisDelp Рік тому +5

      @@pablodelsegundo9502 German Club for me too. Highlight every year was a club field trip the New Braunfels for Wurstfest.

    • @HalfEye79
      @HalfEye79 Рік тому +1

      Yeah, that is the death of nearly all things learnt. Not using it.
      I've taught myself a programming language twice, because I hsvent used it in between. And now, I would need to learn it a third time.

    • @UsmanBello
      @UsmanBello Рік тому +1

      I grew up in El Paso myself and my mother (whose native spoken language is Mandarin Chinese) actually encouraged me to learn Spanish instead from my step-dad (who is from Peru). Upsides include living a city where 70% of the 700k population (and 99% of the 1.2M population across the border) are native Mexican Hispanic and can speak Spanish and also seeing most public signs in both English and Spanish.

    • @toomanyjstoomanyrs1705
      @toomanyjstoomanyrs1705 Рік тому +3

      @@pablodelsegundo9502 you missed out on Texas German? Fredericksburg is near San Antonio.

  • @finnish1954
    @finnish1954 8 місяців тому +2

    As an American k love the German language. It's negative reputation is not based on reality. My father spoke "Plattdeugsch

  • @andrelewis3839
    @andrelewis3839 4 місяці тому

    Very interesting and informative, thank you!Keep up the great work!😊

  • @tetyanamoravska9388
    @tetyanamoravska9388 Рік тому +45

    Hi Feli 🥰 I've learned English and German as foreign languages during my university time. Being an interpreter I mostly use English, but I do love German and enjoy speaking it. And when someone says in a conversation that German is harsh and unpleasant, I start reading a poetry by Heinrich Heine for them. With my subtle voice and Heine's incredible poetry it changes the opinion instantly! 😉❤️

    • @simonruf7188
      @simonruf7188 Рік тому +6

      Vielen Dank für das Vorlesen von Heine.
      Dies bringt die gute Seite der deutschen Kultur unter die Menschen!

    • @isabellalucia7820
      @isabellalucia7820 Рік тому +2

      I do the same, except I use Stefan George's poetry. Feli, any chance you can read us some poems some time?

  • @fang_shi_tong
    @fang_shi_tong Рік тому +115

    I grew up in Canada with English as my mother tongue. I don’t know why, but by my mid-twenties, I fully recognized that German was much sweeter sounding than most people realized. Now, decades later, I am finally making a serious effort to learn this wonderful language. And I thought French was hard! 😅

    • @nork7949
      @nork7949 Рік тому

      As a Mexican, killing millions of people is bad, but I have to admit that our ancestors were heroes and sacrificed their culture and religion, converting to Catholicism to acquire the white race (for marrying with Spanish people), thanks to this half of the country is white and curiously all good artists are white in Mexico

    • @692ALBANNACH
      @692ALBANNACH Рік тому +3

      Have heard similar things said about Russian !

    • @arianewinter4266
      @arianewinter4266 Рік тому +2

      @@692ALBANNACH russian is the bane of my existance!!! I tried so hard to get a hold on it and i just can not figure out how it is spoken. Welsh, france, italien, japanese, swahili, hawaian, I might not nail it, but I get a decent aproximation I can work with togeather . . . but russian? No matter how hard I try to focus I can not hear the melody to follow

    • @txmetalhead82xk
      @txmetalhead82xk Рік тому +1

      I took French in college and loved it. I tried to learn German, and compared to French, it is very hard. I picked up French a lot faster.

    • @arianewinter4266
      @arianewinter4266 Рік тому

      @@txmetalhead82xk I picked up one fance better then on English.... as long as I got e decent teacher in both ... Despite German and English are closer

  • @edmundpotrzeba6094
    @edmundpotrzeba6094 5 місяців тому +2

    I’m half English half Scottish and half polish, my grandchildren who are German fill me with all the love in the world when I hear them speak . ❤️

  • @Overlycomplicatedswede
    @Overlycomplicatedswede 3 місяці тому +3

    I’m a native Swedish speaker and I’ve been learning German but the words “auf” and “auch” mess me up a lot in verbal speaking because of how it sounds and quite similar sounding when I’m not very used to the sound of the language yet.
    Love from Sweden

  • @Al_-cf1dj
    @Al_-cf1dj 11 місяців тому +83

    I think the 'aggressive ' quality of Germany is also often enhanced in movies, due to the bad pronunciation. Like, not to be mean, but German in movies is often pretty terrible and even I, as a native speaker, have trouble understanding it sometimes. Idk if it's the same with other languages, but I often get the impression that there's just a lot less effort put into accurate German than, say French

    • @nastyasunny6977
      @nastyasunny6977 9 місяців тому +18

      I don't know much about other languages, bit It's definitely the same with russian. Not only the characters are mostly villains but also their accent is horrible. Like why can't they hire native speakers, it's usually just a few phrases that need to be said, it can't be a very hard job

    • @Al_-cf1dj
      @Al_-cf1dj 9 місяців тому +12

      @@nastyasunny6977 oh yeah, I feel your pain of always being portrayed as villainous characters, it's so annoying, like, unless it's a movie that involves WWII, which , no argument against doing it then, but so often modern media will stick to this, so yeah, I feel you

    • @luisleal7301
      @luisleal7301 9 місяців тому +7

      It's the same with Spanish, they don't even worry to make it sound natural in American entertainment. Just by watching breaking bad, which is a great show, you can see that Spanish sounds very robotic and unnatural

    • @Al_-cf1dj
      @Al_-cf1dj 9 місяців тому +6

      @@luisleal7301 it's really unfortunate that these languages aren't being accurately represented, you can do so much with that kind stuff, especially if you take into account how little nuances in the language can elevate the text

    • @skyhawk_4526
      @skyhawk_4526 8 місяців тому +2

      I imagine a lot of French people would feel the same way about their language being spoken by non-native actors and actresses in movies.

  • @stevenmatthews2278
    @stevenmatthews2278 Рік тому +233

    I thought German was more of a harsh sounding language. Even after a few years of learning the language, I felt like it was almost short, direct, and aggressive. It wasn’t until visiting Germany when I heard people speaking it in everyday life when I realized it was such a beautiful sounding, calm language. It can sound very open and pleasant as with someone who has a very soft English accent. That’s the best way I know to describe it. 😅

    • @himoffthequakeroatbox4320
      @himoffthequakeroatbox4320 Рік тому +25

      Try Dutch. It sounds like someone choking.

    • @deutschmitpurple2918
      @deutschmitpurple2918 Рік тому +6

      I am so happy to hear that 🤗🤗🤗

    • @minglee8009
      @minglee8009 Рік тому +5

      Til Lindeman said that German is the perfect language for hard metal because it can express anger really well.

    • @keeptaiwanfree
      @keeptaiwanfree Рік тому +9

      @@himoffthequakeroatbox4320 don't worry, after hearing cantonese you will feel like the dutch languages sounds like the voice of angels...

    • @chrismiller5198
      @chrismiller5198 Рік тому +1

      @@himoffthequakeroatbox4320 I thought that was Danish.

  • @martinasaxton7033
    @martinasaxton7033 2 місяці тому +1

    Very well done and researched, Feli! Gut gemacht 😍.
    I agree with all you said!

  • @Kommentator1000
    @Kommentator1000 7 місяців тому +8

    Es ist interessant was andere über unsere Sprache denken. Das Gute an der Sprache sind die Vielzahl von Möglichkeiten und Wörter die es gibt. Man kann vieles damit gut ausdrücken.

    • @user-vu7jx3tp5p
      @user-vu7jx3tp5p 5 місяців тому

      Si , YES fein , Ich lebe in NRW , ich haette , at auch so geschrieben wie Sie . TOP born in germany

  • @mxoxo27
    @mxoxo27 Рік тому +86

    I’ve been learning German for almost two years, and even when I started studying it I thought it sounded a tad aggressive but then I went to Germany. And people there sounded so soothing, adorable and friendly. Like even in general I thought Germans were simply some of the nicest people I’ve ever met, like everyone was so welcoming, helpful, nice. I truly wasn’t expecting that, like I didn’t have the best experiences in Europe cause I went to Spain and people there sounded too loud and weren’t friendly and then to france which without trying to offend Spanish and French people, both were really unfriendly and legit made you feel uncomfortable when you didn’t know their language (I know Spanish but not French, so yeah). Germans were really helpful when you couldn’t express yourself in German, I always tried my best but it was hard. But I swear, I felt so great in Germany, I wanna move permanently there and I know it’s gonna be great, they are so different from the people in my country and I loved that

    • @cleancoder3838
      @cleancoder3838 Рік тому +7

      "I wanna move permanently there" Good decision. We will welcome you.

    • @1L1E1N1A
      @1L1E1N1A Рік тому +2

      🙏❤😊

    • @julianwaugh8221
      @julianwaugh8221 Рік тому +2

      One thing about France mate is know bonjour madame merci! At least your being polite
      I had a lovely time in France I speak a little French.
      As far as Germany goes eat ist ausgeziegnet!

    • @cleancoder3838
      @cleancoder3838 Рік тому +1

      @@julianwaugh8221 "ausgezeichnet" ;-)

    • @GregBrownsWorldORacing
      @GregBrownsWorldORacing 11 місяців тому +2

      They are 95% pleasant, just like everywhere else. If you're struggling with the language, find a teenager... They are pretty doggone bilingual.

  • @susanconnors
    @susanconnors Рік тому +83

    I lived in Germany for 8 years, in Wiesbaden, and loved learning the language and speaking it.. i have to say that it took a while to get used to the abrupt and blunt way in which many Germans in my area spoke. Americans can sound “saccharine” to Germans, as one of my German friends told me. I never realized how soft American English sounded until I lived in Germany. There is nothing timid or hesitant about the way germans speak. So, I understand the funny parodies of German harshness. I got used to the way Germans spoke after a while, and it was okay. Personally, I don’t think the stereotype came just from Hitler. Just my own experience. This was a great video!

    • @antoniocasias5545
      @antoniocasias5545 Рік тому +8

      Must be hangin around with the wrong Germans because my Bonn friends are shy af

    • @inkubusarchitektde
      @inkubusarchitektde Рік тому

      Can you still speak it?

    • @JordanG-ds1ii
      @JordanG-ds1ii Рік тому +1

      Just blame everything on Hitler.

    • @darleneschneck
      @darleneschneck Рік тому

      The same is said of the PA Dutch in eastern Pennsylvania (I'm one). I remember my great-aunts in particular, who came off sounding as gruff and almost angry, but they had a smile on their faces! Our culture didn't sugar-coat, we said what what we meant. However, we didn't like conflict!

    • @seorsamaclately4294
      @seorsamaclately4294 Рік тому +1

      Wiesbaden? Yikes, those guys are uppity.

  • @StickySirFace
    @StickySirFace 5 місяців тому +1

    I have thought about this a lot. This is a great video and you explain it all very well! I am now learning german for my own entertainement. Screaming in german in full sentences is a dream and could be good for future use.😆

  • @little.tricks
    @little.tricks 2 місяці тому +2

    100%. I thought German was this aggressive, harsh and guttural language but my only exposure to it was clips of Hitler speaking during ww2. I recently made some German friends and the way they spoke to each other was so soft, gentle and affectionate-it inspired me to begin learning it! It will be my fourth language after learning Japanese and Korean.

  • @Al-rn5qy
    @Al-rn5qy Рік тому +113

    Ich bin ein Amerikaner und ich liebe deutsch!
    I'm likely one of the few Americans that actually learned German just for fun and am self-taught (no formal schooling in it). So happy I found your channel and am now subscribed; Vielen dank, Feli!

    • @randomstuffs7648
      @randomstuffs7648 11 місяців тому +8

      Vielen Dank, von einen Deutschen.

    • @dadwholeftyou
      @dadwholeftyou 11 місяців тому +3

      ​@@randomstuffs7648 Danke right?

    • @randomstuffs7648
      @randomstuffs7648 11 місяців тому

      @@dadwholeftyou Vielen Dank means much thanks

    • @deaxe-xe7ed
      @deaxe-xe7ed 11 місяців тому +1

      Hi I speak German to i like to see Americans who speak german

    • @Al-rn5qy
      @Al-rn5qy 11 місяців тому

      @@randomstuffs7648 Guten Tag aus der USA!😀

  • @skyhawksailor8736
    @skyhawksailor8736 Рік тому +75

    As a child we moved to Upstate New York in 1967. My oldest brother was the one I really looked up to and he influenced me more than the two brothers between us. In our school system they offered German as a language and my oldest brother took it, he was in the 10th grade, I was in the third. For summer one year he did an student exchange to Germany. When I got into Junior High I took German, like my oldest brother had done. My oldest Brother had lived in New York for two years then moved back to the South for college and stayed there. I wound up taking German for three years, till I moved back to the South. I always enjoyed learning German.
    A few months ago I called my brother and for some reason I had selected his home phone instead his cell. Whenever he gets a call on his home phone and does not recognize the number, he answers the phone in German. Even though I had not spoken German for over 40 years, his greeting, triggered my memory and I responded with the proper response we had been taught in school. My proper response caused him to stuttered out a question, which I answered, this really got him and in English he asked "Who is this". We both had a great laugh. I would end this by writing out in German, Goodnight, I hope you a wonderful day tomorrow, but I know every word would be miss-spelled, and I want to be honest and not go online and get the proper phrase.

    • @cary9479
      @cary9479 Рік тому +5

      "Gute Nacht, ich hoffe du hast morgen einen wundevollen/wunderschönen Tag (morgen could also stand here)."

    • @stingginner1012
      @stingginner1012 Рік тому +3

      Answering the home phone in a foreign language is a great way to stop junk calls. I lived in Japan for three years and learned some of the language. I started answering the phone in Japanese. My junk calls dropped by two thirds. When in Japan I would ask questions in German, and they would ask if I speak English. Simplified things.

  • @calvinroesner9537
    @calvinroesner9537 7 місяців тому +10

    Feli, what a positive and lovely impression of German and Germany you present to the world. I would love to hear you read Die Lorelei!

  • @maglo8
    @maglo8 7 місяців тому +13

    Great channel, and interesting to watch as I’m also a German living in the US …
    I think you have another video about Hitler and the Nazis here- need to watch that, too.
    10+ years ago, many *full* Hitler speeches were available on UA-cam. Now they are censored, but one can still find them in some not so easy to find sources. If you listen to the full text then you will notice that even in his most (in)famous speeches, the screaming parts that everyone knows were only a very small section at the end of the speeches. He often started slow and almost quiet and then slowly increased in loudness and aggressiveness. There was a reason why people say he was a very charismatic speaker who could manipulate his audience. But you gotta listen to more than just the screaming parts for that.
    This is actually very interesting when you compare his speeches with nowadays populist politicians. You can see a lot of similarities there. I’m concerned that by not realizing this (because everyone only knows the screaming segments), people don’t realize that they are falling for similar stuff.

  • @sonyawise8851
    @sonyawise8851 Рік тому +74

    I was speaking German with my family as we were standing in line at a cash register in a US supermarket. The clerk then asked us what language we were speaking. She was very surprised when we explained that we were speaking German. She said it sounded so "nice" and "smooth". I thought that was funny. : )
    Your videos are awesome, Feli! I love how much research you put into everything! Super interesting!
    Weiterhin alles Gute in den USA!

  • @jeconomides
    @jeconomides 11 місяців тому +357

    Feli, you are a massive asset to not only Germany but the whole world because of your incredibly informative, sensitive and sympathetic educational videos. Well done!

    • @jimjensen8048
      @jimjensen8048 11 місяців тому +8

      Agreed

    • @Milesco
      @Milesco 10 місяців тому +3

      Agree, too! 👍

    • @youngsandwich2792
      @youngsandwich2792 9 місяців тому +5

      shes so articulate, and insightfull easy sub

    • @critical_analysis
      @critical_analysis 9 місяців тому

      If you give speeches, people will sleep unlike the one who aroused people.

    • @juanargentum
      @juanargentum 8 місяців тому +2

      Hitler Ruined the Reputation of the German Language because he losed the second war!. From then Germany is a US Colony, and then the german people replace gradually german words with english words, which derived from the low german.

  • @shughl1
    @shughl1 8 місяців тому +1

    Longtime watcher but non-commenter here. I've been on youtube since its inception and I have to say that this video is top 3 to me as one of the most insightful discussions ever put together on this topic. When I think of Germany, I always think of the Reformation fathers, the Age of Reason, the Higher Biblical Criticism Fathers, the Haskalah, Hegel and then after I remember Hitler. I had for years discussed with people as a non-German how sad it is that Germany in this time is not associated with the aforementioned but just for a 10 year span of history. Count with that the fact of the Ashkenazi Jewish contribution through Yiddish that produced some of the most important books of Jewish thought.
    I hope that this video (which I intend to share) might be a way forward for the future in clearing some of the smoke or fog around Germany and perhaps get people to look at Germany through a wider lens in just the same way that we can appreciate Japan (without harping on the Hirohito Era where they invaded China/Korea and so forth), Italy (without constant reference to the Fascist Era), Spain (without making Franco a trigger word) and so forth without making one era or point in history the sum total of the nation.

    • @TheCappuccino2011
      @TheCappuccino2011 День тому

      I only would like to add one citation of I. Kant. He said that Moses Mendelssohn was the only philosopher, who really understood him. They were closely connected.Greetings from Germany.

  • @WilhelmBRA
    @WilhelmBRA 2 місяці тому +3

    As a Brazilian from south (Rio grande do Sul), my parents used to speak some german, but i do not speak (Still, cuz i'm learning). Here in the South of Brazil the german spoke is not similar to "Hochdeutsch" but sound like a mixture of german + Portuguese, like "brot" we say "Broto" (that means Knospe[?] in german) and "kuchen" we say "Cuca" (is the same cake). My late grandma that past away some months ago used to say a lot "katze" here and "katze" there, and i notice that she say that to our cats when she call them, so when i start to learn german i realize a LOT of things my grandma and my grandpa said.

  • @number71
    @number71 Рік тому +23

    My high school German teacher used to play Hitler speeches so we could pronounce the language correctly. What a wonderful man he was. During my freshman year in college , my German professor took me aside and told me I had some of the worst pronunciations he had ever heard. Now I know why, lol

    • @metapolitikgedanken612
      @metapolitikgedanken612 Рік тому +4

      Haha, Hitler spoke High German very good, although with Austrian accentuation. The express use of German as language was also better those days. Lots of the present day texts sound more like gibberish by by people that try to sound 'education' and 'clever'. Some of the semantics has changed as well.

  • @Fgjmnz
    @Fgjmnz Рік тому +67

    I took German in college, and I was very lucky to have a teacher from Köln who spoke so beautifully, that I have thought it as a beautiful language since then.
    Really wish I would’ve kept up with it!

    • @lincolnsixecho51
      @lincolnsixecho51 10 місяців тому +4

      Hi! The Cologne dialect belongs to the rhineland area - and the dialect of the people from the rhineland is known to be extremly soft and 'singing', because they use to give every sentence a melodic appeal! The origins of this lie in the historic fact, that the residents of tge rhinish area always had many trade contacts to thecpeople from other countries, especially those, where dutch and french language were spoken, which are more soft and emotionally painted....
      Greetz,
      Lincoln

    • @Knilch58
      @Knilch58 9 місяців тому +3

      @@lincolnsixecho51 Yeah, melodic. As Karl Lauterbach proves... 😂

    • @lincolnsixecho51
      @lincolnsixecho51 9 місяців тому

      @@Knilch58 Sorry, i forgot, that ONLY YOUR personal opinion or sympathy decides, whether the sound of a language is melodic or not....

    • @Knilch58
      @Knilch58 9 місяців тому +3

      That was meant ironical, and there is no need to be that agressive.
      Do you know Karl Lauterbach? He is the exact opposite of the in deed very melodic and singing rhineland dialect, so I made this joke, not guessing someone could be p!ssed *ff.
      ua-cam.com/video/gvseJXrsuS0/v-deo.html
      Btw, I am a native rhinelander. How about you?

    • @biancadeamer1478
      @biancadeamer1478 7 місяців тому

      ​@@Knilch58
      😅😂😂😂!

  • @harleyhexxe9806
    @harleyhexxe9806 9 місяців тому +9

    Hi Feli, that's quite an interesting direction you took in this video.
    I never really thought of the German language as being harsh or aggressive, since I grew up in Greece, and I attended an international school where students came from all over the world. I had several friends from Germany there, and I still have a few friends in Germany today. Although you didn't mention this in the video, the way Hitler vocalized his speeches to the German people to sway them to his Nazi political views, this also had an indirect influence on the rest of the world about their perception of the German language, and Germany as a whole.
    One point history doesn't stress enough, or just simply forgets about, is that the first country the Nazis invaded was their own. So the first victims to that group of deranged maniacs were the German people themselves.

  • @conlon4332
    @conlon4332 9 місяців тому +2

    13:47 English absolutely has that too, like squirrel, scratch, and worlds.

  • @darleneschneck
    @darleneschneck Рік тому +74

    I’m eighth-generation PA Dutch, and I found this immensely interesting. For one thing, my four grandparents trilled their “r’s” -particularly my Swiss Mennonite grandfather. Their German dialect was their first language, and they learned English when they went to first grade (they were sixth generation Americans!) By the middle of the 20th century and after two world wars, the younger generation tried to shed their accent, as it was seen to signify being unlearned, i.e. “the dumb Dutchman.” It is interesting to note that my grandparents and parents did not identify with Germany by this point, they considered themselves to be fully American.

    • @erichamilton3373
      @erichamilton3373 Рік тому +8

      Some people in Germany still trill or roll their r. My grandfather born 1913 from Hamburg did...as did many Hambrgers of that time. Now no one in Hamburg does.

    • @Slithermotion
      @Slithermotion Рік тому +9

      @@erichamilton3373 Because older people spoke plattdeutsch nativly which younger generations dont do.
      Somehow germany lost a native language and nobody cares.

    • @donkeysaurusrex7881
      @donkeysaurusrex7881 Рік тому

      @@Slithermotion Hochdeutsch is a steamroller.

  • @michaeleastes1705
    @michaeleastes1705 Рік тому +74

    I took German in high school for two years. Later I was sent there by the army for three years. Having learned some Hochdeutsch, I thought that I’d be ok. I ended up in Bavaria. That would be comparable to learning English in London and then moving to Mississippi. Fortunately I was able to muddle through, and the locals practically all spoke English.

    • @jimattrill8933
      @jimattrill8933 Рік тому +6

      I did German (not very successfully) in England for four years. I spent a long time learning to say phonemes that don't exist in English. A good example is the ch sound in 'nicht'. Then I went with the RAF to Wildenrath in Germany for 2 years. I was then amazed to find the locals said 'nay' (or nee) just like the Dutch. They were of course speaking PlattDeutsch which is a bit of a mixture of German and Dutch. I found on my travels that when I went to Hamburg I could understand and speak German much better. By the way I found Germans very friendly and after a couple of beers would want me to use the 'du' form to them. I had trouble explaining that the du forms are somewhat irregular and using the sie form is much easier as I could use the infinitive! I had a friend who then lived in Dusseldorf and he spoke a very peculiar German more or less with no Grammar. For example all definite articles were D' as in D' haus. And all the inflections were ignored as there was no ein eine einer einem etc. He spoke it very quickly and most of the Germans he worked with assumed he came from some 'foreign' place like Munich or Saxony. As a native English speaker I can spot a foreigner a mile away but Germans are easily fooled if you speak a form of German. I did find that I would always ask people if they spoke English before using my terrible German. Otherwise they would think I was a Turkish 'gastarbeiter' and not get good service.

    • @mercatorjubio3804
      @mercatorjubio3804 Рік тому +8

      @@jimattrill8933 You wouldn't have had to worry about being mistaken for a Turk, their highly typical sociolectal version of German is easily distinguishable from a person having a strong English accent. Turkish "German" sounds insulting to native ears, bordering on painful, while Germans are very forgiving towards English speakers, who actually try their best at speaking German.

    • @miriamg3689
      @miriamg3689 Рік тому +2

      @@mercatorjubio3804 Jesus christ chill out bro. racism jumping out on this one

    • @mercatorjubio3804
      @mercatorjubio3804 Рік тому +3

      @@miriamg3689 Just plain facts.

    • @arianewinter4266
      @arianewinter4266 Рік тому +2

      oh no . . . yeah, we got some dialects that are so strong and differ so greatly even in vocabulary, that germans do not understand other germans. . .

  • @joshjosh320
    @joshjosh320 9 місяців тому +6

    Years ago, I set a goal for myself to try to learn German from two films. Wings of Desire, and Downfall. (Oddly enough, both films have the same lead actor, Bruno Ganz.) Sounding the words out, using the subtitles. When I finally visited Berlin in 2015, I kept getting odd reactions to perfectly normal questions like "Will you please direct me to the bunker that serves the sweetest, most delicate coffee roast in all of the Fatherland?"

    • @alf9
      @alf9 2 місяці тому

      😂

  • @user-sz3rd5qk9l
    @user-sz3rd5qk9l 3 місяці тому

    Wow, your English sounds so good, that I caught myself that I didn't turn on subtitles, and even didn't want to when noticed. While I usually in English just for comfort.
    The topic, research, and talk is awesome too!
    Thank you! 🤗

  • @keaton11477
    @keaton11477 Рік тому +76

    German is a rich, fascinating language. One I would love to learn at some point. I've never thought of it as harsh just a few sounds are harsher sounding. But that is the case with most Germanic languages, English included.

    • @hotrodjones74
      @hotrodjones74 Рік тому

      Man, there are more than enough great resources for free you can use to learn German. Deutsche Welle, Easy German on UA-cam, and the UA-camr Radical Living made some kinda video course for this as well. I guess I'll learn some German after I master Norwegian.

    • @M.Viktor121
      @M.Viktor121 Рік тому

      das isz deine einzige atwort !?

  • @adrianusnicholas8600
    @adrianusnicholas8600 Рік тому +333

    Idk i think german sounds elegant and beautiful. Especially since i love reading german poetry in original language. I am from Indonesia

  • @user-vo1jr7cg2k
    @user-vo1jr7cg2k 8 місяців тому

    We had a young German tourist as our waitress ( she was on a working holiday across Australia) very lovely very polite when I used the correct name for Germany she got very excited and happy.
    I think I made her day.

  • @atubebuff
    @atubebuff 5 місяців тому +2

    You're a fantastic presenter and your content is immensely informative. Cheers!

  • @mikehines4576
    @mikehines4576 Рік тому +51

    Feli, I think you’re an incredible ambassador between the two cultures. It’s been over 35 years since I had German in school & yours is one of my main “go to” sights for information & to try to stay somewhat familiar with the language. Thank you! I hope to visit Germany one day & see how well I can make it through daily activities.

    • @johnhblaubachea5156
      @johnhblaubachea5156 Рік тому +1

      I too studied in high and college, but never did anything with it. Now some 40 years later, I am learning new vocabulary, and discovering lots of Englisch Fremdwoerter in German.
      Many of the cultural differences you explained in othervideos, I had been aware of, but not all. This one: can I have been naive to have heard of, or noticed this stereotype?

  • @swxldblob6285
    @swxldblob6285 Рік тому +65

    I'm Italian and since last year i always thought that german didn't sound good at all, but then around january last year, after hearing a german song (ich war noch niemals in new york) i fell in love with this language, I decided to learn it and now it has become my favorite language, I just love the way it sounds, in particular i love the sound "ch" in words like "fertig, zwanzig, vielleicht" and so on, the sound "ch" in words like "doch, Bach, noch" and the "r" sound. I find german words to be simply amazing, and very deep and rich of meaning (like Zweisamkeit, Ehrfurcht, Heimweh" and many many more). I hope that in the future my job will have something to do with german cuz its weird to say but this language just makes me feel good and happy

    • @friedrichstock6377
      @friedrichstock6377 Рік тому +4

      That's a really pleasant compliment to our language! Coming from an Italian even adds to its significance. Don't you ever forget Udo Jürgens to whom you owe your love to your favourite language!

    • @swxldblob6285
      @swxldblob6285 Рік тому +9

      @@friedrichstock6377 ja natürlich, ich habe tatsächlich ungefähr 250 songs von ihm, vielleicht sogar noch mehr, in meiner Playlist auf Spotify und ich höre jeden Tag seine Musik, er ist, zusammen mit dem Pianisten Ludovico Einaudi, mein Lieblingskünstler, und es ist wegen ihm dass ich angefangen habe, Deutsch zu lernen

    • @keeptaiwanfree
      @keeptaiwanfree Рік тому +3

      ah, i started to learn german as well because i found the sounds like "ch" and "r" very beautiful. the pronunciation of the language is very elegant and just satisfying for my ears to hear...

  • @BTinSF
    @BTinSF 8 місяців тому +2

    I'm a classical music fan including opera so Hitler isn't what I think of when the subject is German language, but Wagner and Beethoven and Bach. And for some reason I love listening to it.

  • @hazeleyedsoul3282
    @hazeleyedsoul3282 4 місяці тому +2

    I first learned Germany was NOT harsh like I thought...when I had to sing German operas in college. It was a real eye opener!

  • @ridingonthestorm9526
    @ridingonthestorm9526 Рік тому +51

    Danke Feli! Es ist zwar bis zu einem gewissen Punkt lustig, aber irgendwann ist es eher nervig, welche Vorstellung viele Menschen mit anderer Muttersprache von der deutschen Sprache haben. 😅

    • @maikehudson333
      @maikehudson333 Рік тому +6

      Ganz genau.

    • @bjornmeerwald3365
      @bjornmeerwald3365 Рік тому +11

      Ja sehe ich genauso, umso glücklicher bin ich, dass es Feli gibt die so unermüdlich, informativ und unterhaltsam über ihr Geburtsland spricht.

    • @niceberliner
      @niceberliner Рік тому

      @@maikehudson333 Diese ganzen Übertreibungen sind absolut nervtötend. Und totaler Quatsch. Millionen Deutsche sprechen leise und angemessen.

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican Рік тому +85

    Bingo! This is the influence that media has on society. Media influences the way we think, so when media spread lies like it has when it comes to the German language, then people take it as fact. Growing up in NY, I've taken trips to rural Pennsylvania for antique shops (besides for Hershey) so the first time I've heard someone speaking a variety of German as their language was through the Pennsylvania Dutch, and they sound quite the opposite of being angry! I've always thought it was fascinating that Pennsylvania managed to keep this old variety of the language intact.
    Stereotypes lead to so much unnecessary hate, and it's scary to see its consequences. People really need to give cultures and languages a chance. That's how we grow as people. By learning another culture, we start to expand our horizons and change our perspectives.

    • @theparadigm8149
      @theparadigm8149 Рік тому +8

      Dang, long-time-no-see, Avery! I used to see you everywhere, just like Some Guy Without A Mustache, but not so much recently

    • @kennethwayne6857
      @kennethwayne6857 Рік тому +5

      Very well said!

    • @yashiraeunicerodriguezmora1046
      @yashiraeunicerodriguezmora1046 Рік тому +2

      Yes exactly...🥺🥺🥺

    • @Adriano70911
      @Adriano70911 Рік тому

      What stereotypes do you mean

    • @larryhats4320
      @larryhats4320 Рік тому

      Just wait to see what they try to do with the Russian language in western controlled media, it'll be no different. Just watch, it's all going to shift to Iran, Russia and China and how they sound or look now. But for that they'll need new narratives. Nobody is gonna die, like they did in the Middle East, because "but Hitler" and 1940s whatever. Which should be interesting, since Hollywood and the globalists have been running on that mode for nearly 100 years now.
      Whole new world. I bet they can't believe they got so far, and it all came crashing down, coincidentally, with the Jeffrey Epstein end, Benghazi and the failure of Soros projects and the end of Mafia state Ukraine. And now UA-cam Ceo Susan W is also stepping down. Totally destroyed this platform. Bye bye

  • @vintagehaynesflute
    @vintagehaynesflute 7 місяців тому +1

    my grandparents were German (Mainz) and they not only NEVER sounded like Hitler but referred to him as "Der Idiot"

  • @stephenyardley4880
    @stephenyardley4880 3 місяці тому +2

    We hired a German college girl in our office. She was very sweet and very quiet. She certainly didn't have the stereotypical roughness in her language or manner.
    Hitler was in most part an actor. Not at all representing the people of Germany.

  • @tiffanimilburn8885
    @tiffanimilburn8885 Рік тому +37

    I’ve been learning German for two years as a second language, and anytime I mention learning German, People usually mention that they think it sounds aggressive. I really like the sound of the German language.

    • @JimAllen-Persona
      @JimAllen-Persona Рік тому +2

      I interpret it as “brusque”- not aggressive

    • @weiserwolfsgeist
      @weiserwolfsgeist Рік тому +3

      I lived there for 3 years and learned the language pretty well. Somehow, whenever I mention German, though, people haven't said anything about how aggressive it is to me, bur rather how difficult of a language to learn it is or they mention the umlauts quite often. It is an awesome language and very similar to English than most if not all languages. Unfortunately, I don't have anyone to speak it with, though, and it has been roughly 4 years since I've been to Germany and spoke German on a regular basis. I'm looking forward to taking some classes at a university here where I live soon.

    • @belsrevenge24
      @belsrevenge24 Рік тому +2

      @@weiserwolfsgeist try hello talk or tandem. You can speak with native speakers there. :)

    • @weiserwolfsgeist
      @weiserwolfsgeist Рік тому +2

      @Kari Freud I don't do well with online learning, but I didn't know they had native speakers that you can talk to. That might be worth looking into. I've tried so many online language learning apps, but I never get anywhere with them.

    • @undeadwerewolves9463
      @undeadwerewolves9463 Рік тому

      @@weiserwolfsgeistWell are you into gaming? I found German servers on some games and met people to practice and speak to while playing. Playing a video game in another language really covers many aspects you’ll need in real life. Navigation/coordination, questions, answers, requests, instructions and much much more. Some Russians youtubers I like actually learned English through games and speaking to people online. That blew my mind lol. But yes seriously great idea to study it properly at a university, well done for taking that step I wish you luck! Try gaming if you have free time ;)

  • @GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture
    @GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture Рік тому +105

    To be fair, yes, I did have that perception growing up but being Jewish, my upbringing concerning Germans in the 1960s was not exactly objective. All that being said, my high school, which was 75% Jewish, oddly enough offered German as well as Hebrew, so my views began to change. When I went to college, I took Yiddish, which did help me in learning German, so I could speak it as well as read and write it (the pride my grandparents had when I wrote them a letter in Yiddish became the stuff of legends in their old folks home). However, my pronunciations of the “ch” and “r” sounds are still a bit harsher to this day than any German speaker. My German instructor would call on me not by name but by over doing my “ch” to the point it sounded like he was trying to hock a loogie.
    Also, the summer I worked in Germany, I worked with people from France and there was a lot of harsh and guttural sounds when they spoke French so I wasn’t fooled into thinking the French was some more beautiful language. Same with Spanish, having lived in Tucson and various parts of California.
    What is also funny, my Spanish speaking co-workers, upon hearing me speak German with tourists from Germany and Austria (I don’t bother with tourists from Switzerland because their dialect is a bit too difficult, especially those from the Bern Canton) were amazed at how beautiful German could sound because they were only exposed to the stereotype tropes on TV and in the movies.

    • @Milesco
      @Milesco Рік тому +5

      Interesting comment, but I especially wanted to say I like your screen name! 👍⚖

    • @RustyDust101
      @RustyDust101 Рік тому +16

      From a German: Totally understandable, and no criticism for how you were raised. With the memory of the holocaust still so very close and vividly in their minds, many Jewish people obviously had good reason to hate German and Germany. Today I completely am ashamed (but not feel guilty) for the atrocities committed back then. One other, little noticed atrocity is the destruction wrought on shared cultural values, such as the circular influence of Yiddish on German and vice versa.
      Yes, I know, antisemitism was a (terrible but longstanding) fact for much longer than Nazis existed, and a lot of inequality and suppression and oppression happened to many Jewish people throughout the centuries. Yet without the close cultural links between the Jewish people dispersed among so many other nations which were their home countries a lot of culture would not have happened. It is so sad that the Nazis committed these 'secondary' atrocities to culture whose effects have lasted until today. It is so difficult to find everyday exposure to Yiddish in Germany to this very day.

    • @GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture
      @GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture Рік тому +16

      @@RustyDust101 very well said. I worked a summer in Germany in 1982 and my parents didn’t understand how I could do such a thing. I told them that I had come to know many Germans and found things were quite different. Also, by that point the majority of Germans had been born after the end of WW2. It was time to move forward, not be stuck in the past. I wasn’t going to forget what happened but I wasn’t going to blame people who weren’t even alive at the time.
      I remember I had to talk to my dad and remind him he brought up my sister, brother and me to judge people on who they were, not what they were. He said he knew I was right but it was still difficult. He was also proud that I actually learned what he felt was the most important thing he had taught me. He managed to smooth things out with my step-mother for me. When I told them I met the grandson of of a family that had helped smuggle Jews into Switzerland, I think that helped them heal as well.

    • @frankmaeder4358
      @frankmaeder4358 Рік тому

      sir, i guess next time you could try to bother with the Swiss also, cos those of us who travel internationally have no problem to switch to standard german, even with a bit of accent...

    • @GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture
      @GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture Рік тому +3

      @@frankmaeder4358 while the Swiss can speak standard German, many have told me it is easier for them to speak in English than standard German. That is why I speak to the Swiss in English. I would rather not try to do something that makes them uncomfortable.
      One thing that I still remember after more than 40 years is how to count in the Bern dialect (I spent a few days visiting a friend who was working on a farm just outside of Bern). I have no idea why I still remember. The daughter, who was our age, taught me. The family was incredibly nice and gracious. I had some of their homemade Schnapps that delightfully burned the throat.

  • @vvmandosam655
    @vvmandosam655 7 місяців тому

    Fili, you are awesome!! When I mentioned to my Hungarian great grandmother that I was learning the German language she remarked "German is a beautiful language!" Sadly,my German studies have switched more into my Italian studies.. I do love your You Tube . It keeps me in touch with with my German roots!!

  • @livrowland171
    @livrowland171 7 місяців тому +4

    I'm British and know little German but think it's a nice-sounding language and no 'harsher' than French, which I'm fluent in and which is often deemed beautiful. It basically just depends who's speaking it and what they're saying.. German can be soft and beautiful. Also, it can sound beautiful sung.

  • @jericojopio1713
    @jericojopio1713 Рік тому +34

    Honestly, I used to think that German language sounded rough and aggressive but now I believe that the language actually sounds beautiful. Feli, I salute you for making the effort to give justice to your language and restore its great reputation. Trust us, you're not alone in your advocacy.😊😀🇩🇪🇵🇭

  • @christinacosta3001
    @christinacosta3001 Рік тому +118

    As an American born in the 1970s, this was absolutely the image, sound, and impression of Germany and the German language I grew up with. Only as an adult, watching foreign films and listening to foreign music did I gain a different view. I have been studying the German language and I actually love it very much. Certainly more than French, to be honest. I find German to be a beautiful language. Thank you for your content Feli!

    • @melchior2678
      @melchior2678 Рік тому +11

      Feli: People only think German sounds angry because of Hitler
      Rammstein: are we a joke to you? Hold our beers.

    • @christinacosta3001
      @christinacosta3001 Рік тому

      @@melchior2678 oh my gosh!! So funny!!

    • @melchior2678
      @melchior2678 Рік тому +1

      @@christinacosta3001 more importantly, it's true.

    • @christinacosta3001
      @christinacosta3001 Рік тому

      @@melchior2678 it is absolutely true...which is why it's so funny!

    • @bhami
      @bhami Рік тому +3

      Agreed. Just my totally biased personal taste, but I hate French phonology. To me French sounds like a bunch of geese talking through their noses. I don't know why, but to me all those uvular Rs just sound much more obnoxious in French compared to in German. Spanish and Italian are my favorite phonologies, and I've studied Spanish, Russian, and German. To me Russian is actually a lot like English (and perhaps like European Portuguese) with the way unaccented vowels often get "schwa"ed out.

  • @alessandroscarrone
    @alessandroscarrone 7 місяців тому +2

    Some people have told me: "Germans scream too much. I prefer Italian, it's the most romantic language in the world"
    Oh god, come visit south Italy so all romance disappears and screaming nonsense begins lol

  • @ke6ziu
    @ke6ziu 7 місяців тому +2

    According to a documentary I saw about him, friends of his said that he didn't speak a typical Austrian accent. When his father was alive, and still working with the Austrian government, the father moved the family to the German side of the border (he was born in Braunau...).

  • @aglaurendance
    @aglaurendance Рік тому +20

    I’m an American girl who spent middle school stationed abroad in rural England. I was in the top (academically-performing/gifted) homeroom class for my year group, so the school made my class take German, French, and Latin as our foreign languages. The kids took French in sixth grade and then Latin and German as well in seventh. I joined the school in seventh grade, so I liked that everyone was on the same page as me with German and Latin (it took me a bit to catch up to my peers in French, as my sixth grade school didn’t offer French). Also, honestly, my German teacher was a significantly better teacher than my Latin teacher, so I quickly grew to love German and prefer it over Latin and thought it was such a neat language (my teacher also constantly emphasized the similarities to English, which helped me catch on to it). One set of my great-grandparents immigrated to the US from Düsseldorf, so I also liked the connection to my ancestry. In all, I spent 8 school years studying German, going all the way through college (by this point, back in America). I love the language and how it sounds (for me, the words seem easier to differentiate orally than say French or Spanish or Latin, which I appreciate). I even influenced my little sister to start studying German when we were next living in the US (she was in primary school when we were in England, so no languages for her)- she even ended up double-majoring in university in German (and political science). We both quite enjoy the language and how it sounds.

  • @attrett
    @attrett Рік тому +22

    A fascinating video, thanks a lot for your effort Feli!!! As a professional German teacher in Poland, I often face those prejudices or attitude towards the German language you mentioned at the beginning, and not only from Polish native speakers. Your contribution helped me a lot to understand this attitude (which has many other, mostly historical reasons) and I'll use this video in my lessons. Thanks a lot for this very well written and resesarched video, great stuff! Greetings from Cracow

  • @valerietaylor9615
    @valerietaylor9615 8 місяців тому +4

    My older brother took two years of high school German. I learned a few words and phrases from him as a child, and liked the sound of the language so much, that I signed up for four years of German when I entered high school, and loved every minute of it.
    I’m a little puzzled as to why German is considered a difficult language. I find the Slavic languages infinitely harder. I once tried to learn Slovenian( I’m partly of Slovenian heritage ), but only managed to acquire a smattering of words and phrases.
    If there is still anyone out there who considers German an ugly language, I suggest that they listen to recordings by the great German operatic tenor, Fritz Wunderlich. Wunderlich died in 1966, at not quite thirty-six years of age, but left behind a wealth of recordings, the majority of them in German. If Wunderlich’s singing fails to convince the most hardened skeptics that German can sound beautiful, then nothing can. Except maybe to stop watching all those World War II movies!
    P.S. My high school German teacher used to pronounce the “rs” at the end of German words, but he used the uvular, not the tongue-trilled version. He was from Stuttgart - did he have a Swabian accent?

    • @Justforvisit
      @Justforvisit 7 місяців тому

      That's very possible, in the south of Germany the r is indeed usually stressed a bit more.

    • @valerietaylor9615
      @valerietaylor9615 7 місяців тому

      @Justforvisit
      Thanks for the info. Now that I think of it, there was a boy in the class whose parents were from Hanover and spoke German at home. The boy once asked our teacher if he was from southern Germany, from the way he rolled his “r”s.

    • @vridrich99
      @vridrich99 4 місяці тому +1

      Someone mentioning Wunderlich in a UA-cam post. It gave me a huge smile. The best German tenor, so clear in word and sound, sublime. (Am still smiling ...)

    • @valerietaylor9615
      @valerietaylor9615 4 місяці тому +2

      @vridrich99
      I’m so glad to know there are other Wunderlich fans out there. That always makes my day. 😊

  • @hansstromberg5330
    @hansstromberg5330 7 місяців тому +1

    Ueber alle Gipfelsn ist Ruh, in den Wipfeln spuerst du kaum einen Hauch. Die Vögelein schweigen im Walde, watre nur, balde ruhest du auch.
    This is one of the most beautiful poems I know, it´s German and to me partly characterizes the German language. I am 77, my native language is Swedish, another Germanic language. I started learning German at the age of 13, and due to English being so dominant, my German is oftentimes failing, due to lack of use.
    If one was to use the was Donnald Trump speaks as a yard-stick, English would be considered harsh, vulgar, and evil, not as the language of poets...
    Hans Strömberg, Stockholm, Sweden

  • @drzlecuti
    @drzlecuti Рік тому +63

    Ausgezeichnet, Feli. As a young kid growing up in Chicago in the 1960s, I heard just about no one speaking German and my exposure to native speakers was largely limited to a few clips of Hitler that might have shown up on TV in documentaries or movies. In 8th grade I was at our local library and found the old Berlitz language instruction books and started poring over them; that was my first exposure to written German. In high school I read a bilingual version of "Parabeln und Paradoxe" by Kafka with English on one page and German on the facing page and that helped me creep towards a bit more knowledge. It wasn't until college, where one of my roomies was a modern language major who was already very fluent in German, that I found the great treasure trove of German poetry and stories--Heine, Hesse, Holderlin, and many others. One of the most beautiful lines I've heard are from a poem by Hesse ("Beim Schlafengehen") set to music by Richard Strauss at the end of his life; it probably appeals to my old night-owl nature:
    "Und die Seele unbewacht
    Will in freien Flügen schweben,
    Um im Zauberkreis der Nacht
    Tief und tausendfach zu leben."
    Your comments about German versus French, Italian, and Spanish make sense; those languages seem to have a much higher ratio of vocalic sounds to consonantal sounds than German (and, for that matter, the Slavic languages and other central European languages like Hungarian). It's an interesting distinction. In English we can often say the same thing two different ways: using Anglo-Saxon words, or using Romance language words. "I saw the car go over the hill" or "I observed the automobile traverse the prominence." Hardly anyone would actually say the latter sentence, but you get the idea. It's almost like there are two different "sub-languages" lurking within English. I think a lot of people profile others by the types of words they use and their pronunciation.

    • @mathboy8188
      @mathboy8188 Рік тому +3

      "I observed the automobile traverse the prominence." = Awesome.

    • @bhami
      @bhami Рік тому +2

      English vocabulary is said to be about 60% French & Latin on the Germanic base. I've heard it described as, Middle English was sort of a creole of Old English and Norman French.

    • @stephenbeck9848
      @stephenbeck9848 Рік тому

      Regarding "I think a lot of people profile others by the types of words they use..." I agree. I believe the words we choose reveal our individuality or style. Just as every musician has their own way of expressing themselves, and every book writer must be original (not plagiarize,) we are unique in the words we choose.

    • @michaelhuttig6596
      @michaelhuttig6596 Рік тому +5

      You forgot another source of the English language, that is even larger than the Roman/Latin one. That is the Nordic/Scandinavian influence. It is extremely.
      I, as a Beatles fan, was always impressed by those word games of John Lennon's.
      Like, 'imagine there's no heaven(!), above us only sky(!)'.
      This does only work due to the possibility to use the Anglo-Saxon based 'heaven' versus the Nordic 'Sky'.
      Both source languages are Germanic ones (West Germanic, North Germanic, respectively) but very clearly different to a certain degree. Lennon's sentence makes no sense in German, since we haven't got separate words for a spiritual or a physical Himmel. It's all heaven to us. To create a similar message we would have to use 'All' , or maybe 'Raum' (in the meanings of outer space) and it would not cause the same easy, immediate, emotional reaction.
      And a third group of languages had a very strong impact on modern English. That is the Celtic ones.
      Because there, of course, was a huge amount of nativ Celtic speakers that were forced to get into use of English as their second language but without learning it by the rules but instead by sheer contact to it, they were creating a sort of creole form of English. This mirrored back to the original native English speakers. But this did not lead to a large Celtic based vocabulary, but rather to a heavy change in the grammer and thereby moved the words around in their position in a sentences structure and a few other aspects as well.
      German hasn't changed in grammar very much since it emerged out of Western Germanic but English moved away from the common base a lot. That is the main reason for difficulties when learning German or English from each opposite perspective.

    • @erichamilton3373
      @erichamilton3373 Рік тому

      Even car is from Latin.

  • @adamsaben3299
    @adamsaben3299 11 місяців тому +78

    I've never met a German person before (for in Germany). You are such a nice ambassador for the country. It's a pleasure watching your videos

  • @joeldykman7591
    @joeldykman7591 4 місяці тому +4

    When studying Germany in WWII in high school, my history teacher played one of Hitler's speeches. Setting the content of the speech aside and only focusing on the oration techniques he used, I can tell you its not surprising that he created such a strong cult of personality. His pattern was often to start a speech rather meekly and softly then slowly build power behind his words until it crescendos near the end. Its a pattern that works well with humans in general and is often used in music for a similar, attention grabbing effect. I could see how some person in the crowd had somewhat relatable opinions of the state of Germany at the time could be suckered in by his oration.
    I am by no means singing any praises to the content of Hitler's speeches, just merely explaining a reason as to why they were so effective.

  • @vitaly244
    @vitaly244 8 місяців тому +1

    When I learned at school in the Soviet Union there was a choice. What language to study English or German?
    I was a little boy but I realized that German is a language for two or three countries speak. I chose English 👍

  • @Hunterjumper07
    @Hunterjumper07 Рік тому +47

    Growing up in the US during the late 80s and onward, German was definitely seen (in my experience) as a rough language and culture. It was indeed always referred back to Hitler, and most examples came from his speeches. You would rarely see any other examples, except when at the theme parks, you occasionally would hear German in a strict raised voice at children who weren't listening (like every single other family of many different languages there 😂). When I went into high school it was time to start foreign language classes and I didn't want to take Spanish or French, so I chose German. My German teacher was an older rougher-around-the edges kind of lady. I liked her, but looking back, she definitely represented the language in a rough way. So this vision of German remained true for those years and into adulthood.
    This changed in college for me though. I still very much loved the German language, the beautiful landscape, and the cultures. When it came time to do another few semesters of a foreign language, I went back into German classes as a refresher. This time, I had a gentle kind older man as my professor who had spent a lot of time in Germany and around native Germans. He was completely opposite from my high school teacher. Like yours, his German was soft and more natural. This is where I learned proper German and absolutely fell in love with the language. I think it's actually a beautiful language that is very clear and easy to understand once you learn to be more fluent in it. I actually do not find it much different from English.
    So in my experience growing up and from talking to other people along the way about it when they find out I know/learned to speak German... I can relate to what you brought up in this video and I'd say this is probably where it stems from. Interesting topic for sure. Thank you for covering all sorts of these topics. I love your videos and enjoy learning some new things coming from a native Germans experience.

    • @thomaslehrer4210
      @thomaslehrer4210 9 місяців тому +1

      German and English have a lot in common. Both are indogermanic languages and a lot of words are equal or similar.

    • @TheVideoSlick
      @TheVideoSlick 8 місяців тому

      exactly MOST AMERICANS ARE FROM GERMANIC INDO EUROPEAN DESCENT THE hEBREW SNAKE PEOPLE TRICKED US WITH SNAKE LIES TO GET US TO KILL OUR OWN .THINK ABOUT IT REAL HARD AND YOU WILL KNOW I AM RIGHT.

  • @frankrault3190
    @frankrault3190 Рік тому +56

    64 years old Dutchman here.
    As a child I regularly went on summer-holiday in Austria in the mid sixties up to the mid eighties. Our hotel always knew lots of German guests and we made friends with some.
    After some years we found out: The German guests born before 1930 all pronounced their words differently to the post 1930 generations. this applied to most of them, regardless of their local German accents, like Bavarian, Hamburgian,or the Rhineland Palatinate accents, etc.
    Among us we called the pre-1930 generations the "AUFMACHEN" people, although there were several very kind people among them. they obviously made a lot more decibels!!! The post 1930 generation stressed their voice way less then did the elder people.
    When a random travel bus would arrive, bringing German hotel-guests, we could blindly hear if they were oldies (born before the thirties) or "young ones" (basically born after 1935).
    My parents, who suffered seriously from the German occupation in Holland, were reluctant as for making friends with the elder Germans. Being friends with the post thirties generations appeared to be something they had no trouble with at all....
    So, they made friends with a "young" (remember, back then!) couple from Cologne who had a daughter of my age. And yes, both 12 years old, she and I got completely "verknallt" in each other....
    I don't know where she lives now (hoping she's well and healthy), but no one could live up to this girl evermore. Since, I love the Kölsch accent a lot! ❤

    • @mina_en_suiza
      @mina_en_suiza Рік тому +1

      Speaking of Kölsch: This dialect sounds really soft and cosy.

    • @MrRavenski23
      @MrRavenski23 Рік тому +1

      People way of speaking is very different these days possibly in most languages, In French for example and specially Parisian French, nobody speaks like Maurice Chevallier or Mistinguette these days and this is also true for BBC English, if you listen to old recordings of Pathe news for example. As you said, the 30s or around there is when the change took place .

    • @chasemcintyre3528
      @chasemcintyre3528 Рік тому +1

      I wonder if maybe some of the older people were speaking loudly and enunciating more due to hearing loss. I've known people who did that because they couldn't hear very well.

    • @supadupahilton6848
      @supadupahilton6848 Рік тому +1

      Geh und finde sie!

    • @frankrault3190
      @frankrault3190 Рік тому +2

      @@chasemcintyre3528 Well, yeah, I know what you mean.
      However, ittook place around 1970
      So, people born in 1930 only were 40 years old. Those born in 1920 were 50 years old.
      From the kid's point of view they were fossils. But, I believe there wasn't much wrong with their ears back then.

  • @Foodgeek
    @Foodgeek 8 місяців тому +1

    While I am a Dane, I grew up visiting my Dad, my stepmom, and my two sisters in Düsseldorf. I don't think in everyday applied speaking that German sounds harsh, but then again, people say that some of the sounds that come out of Danish mouths sound harsh, so that might play a role :)

  • @ceedee9186
    @ceedee9186 8 місяців тому +1

    I lived and worked in Germany for 3 years. In Konstanz exactly. There was a mix of German and Swiss German spoken there. Some crazy pronunciations in the mix. I was surprised that everyone was speaking really calm and gently. Nowhere close to how Hitler spoke.

    • @BasementEngineer
      @BasementEngineer 8 місяців тому +1

      Hitler's speech was to encourage his people to work harder and more efficiently if they wanted to raise their standard of living. And it worked better than anyone had anticipated. By 1936 unemployment was practically non existent, whereas other countries, especially USA, was still deeply mired in the Great Depression.

  • @robbenn69
    @robbenn69 Рік тому +24

    Excellent video! I studied German as a minor in Hunter College because my grandmother couldn’t learn it. She was born in 1911, here in the US. During World War I, it was against the law in the US to teach German or speak it in public. If you spoke German in public you would not get arrested, but you would certainly be suspected as an unpatriotic, anti-American, German sympathizer. This could, at worst, get you investigated or detained by police or, at best, cause you to get a lot of angry looks and arguments from non-German speaking Americans. As I was growing up, being a 4th generation German-American, I felt a subtle discrimination against German-Americans. When I was born in 1969, World War II was still fairly fresh in people’s minds, with many veterans still alive. I think that this is also part of the reason that German is portrayed the way it is in film and TV for both comedic as well as dramatic effect. It was so bad for me, I legally changed my name from Robert Kaiser to Robert Bennett. I felt ashamed to be German-American. I don’t feel that way anymore but the stereotypes still persist, somewhat. For example, there is a children’s animated Christmas show called, “Santa Clause is Coming to Town.” In it, the bad guy is Bürgermeister Meisterburger. His guards are all spike helmed, mean looking types, who take toys away from the children. The town’s peasants look much like Warsaw ghetto Jews, though not expressly Jewish. Everyone is miserable until, Kris Kringle gives out toys and must struggle against the Bürgermeister who has outlawed toys. Also, look at another film, “Chitty, Chitty, Bang, Bang.” In this one, German actor, Gert Frobe, plays a King who lives in Schloss Neuschwannstein and hates children. He keeps them locked up in a dungeon. And on and on. American war films propagated this hatred for Germans and there was even a TV Sitcom called “Hogan’s Heroes,” produced by the very Irish-American Bing Crosby, about a German POW camp. I don’t know what’s worse, showing a POW camp in the 1960s and 70s, or the fact that the Germans in it are stupid, fools that make one wonder how they were able to put up much a fight during the war. But that is the point, right? History is written by the victors. Whenever someone mentions how harsh German is, I play the German version of “It’s a Small World After All” or “Druck die Eins” by Annette Louisan. Thanks for this video.

    • @larryhats4320
      @larryhats4320 Рік тому

      Billy Wilder directed the Buchenwald videos too, no surprise.

    • @PaulMcElligott
      @PaulMcElligott Рік тому +2

      Hogan’s Heroes show the Germans as fools because it’s, you know, a comedy. Also, most of the actors playing the Germans were German themselves, usually German Jews, some of whom survived concentration camps. It was the actors who insisted on this comedic take on the Nazis. It’s no different than the approach Mel Brooks used for The Producers or to portray racism in Blazing Saddles. It’s not meant to be an attack on all Germans, nor should it be taken that way.

    • @larryhats4320
      @larryhats4320 Рік тому +1

      ​@@PaulMcElligott whether intended or not, it pointed to destroying German culture pride in America, just like everything now discontinuing similar.
      you write:
      "Also, most of the actors playing the Germans were German themselves, usually German Jews"
      It's telling that Einstein never referred to himself as German, he's only now shilled as German. The others weren't so different from Einstein, with their outlook and motives, were they?
      At first, that's odd; calling themselves Germans allowed them to BE the definition of German instead of being the out-group they had been to the Germans. Is that not the ultimate smite and ethnic triumph? Of course, that could only help the very German people move on who they were literally shilling to bomb to pieces ten years earlier, and we've seen the hate parade continue to at least 2020, milking the German people for "what happened" for all they are worth. Around the Christmas holiday, they air Spielberg's Shindler's List. That's intentional. It's a power play. How can you watch a film like Dr. Strangelove and not see the same, the effort like elsewhere in society, to perpetuate a solid narrative with self-benefiting values and worldview hostile to Germans? There are more examples, like the Sound of Music. Or the film "The Mouse that Roared". Always undermining, characterizing and preaching in a way that accelerates openness to their outlook, and hardly a homage to what you perceive it as.

    • @butchyboy69
      @butchyboy69 Рік тому

      @@larryhats4320 I lived in Germany in the late 60s. At that time Hogans Heroes was very popular among Germans. The dialogue was overdubbed in German. Sergeant Schultz was the most popular character as I recall.

  • @LucasBenderChannel
    @LucasBenderChannel Рік тому +84

    This video was very well structured 👏 It flowed very nicely. Maybe a weird thing to compliment, but it really stood out to me. 😄

    • @FelifromGermany
      @FelifromGermany  Рік тому +13

      Haha thank you :)

    • @bellbrass
      @bellbrass Рік тому +6

      Yeah, her videos are always well-put together. I bet she'd be great directing a documentary.

  • @EJS0100
    @EJS0100 6 місяців тому +1

    Excellent job! Thanks for speaking out.

  • @shookone568
    @shookone568 5 місяців тому

    This is such an informative video. Thanks 🙏🏽

  • @yasminesteinbauer8565
    @yasminesteinbauer8565 Рік тому +5

    And don't forget about Rammstein. Who also promote this stereotype through their martial appearance and exaggerated intonation.😅

  • @alexjensen7622
    @alexjensen7622 Рік тому +19

    I used to think that German was a phlegmy, aggressive language. But then, I decided to try to learn it to impress someone (spoiler alert: that never works). After studying it as long as I have, now I feel like German has a certain subtle beauty to it, and I look forward to my lessons or watching videos like this.
    Great job, Feli!

  • @BerigVintrange
    @BerigVintrange 2 місяці тому

    I love hearing my German hosts / dear friends speak to one another around the table, I passively study German, use a parallel Bible, English / German, I've managed to survive when cycling on my own in rural Bavaria, I speak Spanish and French, I can say that most German words I've learned I can clearly recognize, not true of Spanish and French, the words flow more together and I sometimes miss them. Enjoy your videos!

  • @ajas7851
    @ajas7851 9 місяців тому +1

    Really nice presentation on the issue of german language..As a non german person from India, I must say that you appear very friendly and easy going in your presentation compared to many if not most germans based on my limited interactions and limited knowledge (especially Lufthansa)..I do agree that many non germans people or outsiders are influenced by the images of world war 2 and Nazi germany in their assessment of not only german language but also the behaviour and attitude of German people..Hitler and Nazism while being an evil and hateful ideology was very powerful and influential in shaping the geopolitics of much of the 20th century unfortunately..He was an extremely brilliant and magnetic orator and was able to move the german masses and whether we like it or not he had a cult personality among the german people..Dietrich Eckhart was also his mentor and guided him in much of his matters including speech..However he is not the only influence on the german language..The other Nazi offices of the SS like Heinrich Himmler did not have an image of a passionate speaker who shouts and screams..Rather they brought an image of being cold blooded, inhuman, ruthless, clinical efficiency, lack of emotions or warmth and absolutely cool manner in evil..That is what looks more dangerous than Hitler and i also had that perception about the germans..No doubt in the world Germany and Japan are two societies known for extremely high levels of discipline, efficency and quality in their products..That clinical efficiency becomes cold blooded when the nazis killed 6 million jews in concentration camp like a sort of factory..More than the language i also feel it is the attitude..Germans and especially North west europeans are more cold, direct and blunt in their communication which may sound rude or distant/stand offish especially to people from the eastern societies..Southern europeans like italians and spanish are more warm and passionate in their communication..so possibly culture alao plays a role in language..

    • @BasementEngineer
      @BasementEngineer 8 місяців тому

      You have swallowed way too much British anti-German propaganda. These lies are continued to this day in order yo keep the blackmail money flowing to "that shitty little country".

  • @atze1511
    @atze1511 Рік тому +82

    I thought it was a shame how Sarah Chalke ridiculed her grandmother's language just to get a few laughs. She speaks fluent German, which you could also see and hear in scrubs. So she could have set the record straight on Conan.
    Your video is very good and brought me as a German some new information.

    • @GeteMachine
      @GeteMachine Рік тому +8

      It could be some internalized stereotypes that she expected non-German speakers to already know or percieve, and thus find them funny in a self-depricating way. A lot of nonenglish speaking people tend to do that. A lot of the time on comedy shows people tend to do that. Exaggerate for laughs and then kind of agree with it to make them feel comfortable already thinking that or that she might think its weird because Americans think it sounds like that.

    • @heros2110
      @heros2110 Рік тому

      Indeed. Which, to me, made her a c..t, sorry to say that.

    • @imdoughankinson
      @imdoughankinson 11 місяців тому

      I think this is being a little sensitive. I live in Oklahoma, and I can make fun of the stereotypical Oklahoman accent, knowing that most people don’t actually sound like that at all. The stereotypical
      caricature of an American accent in Europe is “Well howdy, y’all!” No one sounds like that or says that. One of the guys that called her a c-t and your comments needs to take the stick out of his ass.

  • @waynegallant4806
    @waynegallant4806 Рік тому +5

    I was stationed in Germany for 5 years in the late 80's and early 90's. When I got there I knew two words Ja und Nein. I had some airmen who worked for me that gave me a basic German book by Maria Madrigal and I picked up basic phrases. Then ZDF had American Series like Dallas dubbed in German from the previous TV season and that helped in following conversations. German friends added to my knowledge and by the time the returned to the US I could carry conversations in German. I went back in 2017 for the first time and was surprised how quickly it all came back.

    • @susanconnors
      @susanconnors Рік тому

      I lived in Wiesbaden during that time, for 8 years

  • @jenn976
    @jenn976 6 місяців тому +1

    Thank you for this video. My mother’s family came over from Germany to the US in the 1890s so there was no stigma attached to the language (they lived in NYC for about 100 years and in the Upper East Side of Manhattan which was called “Little Germany” in the 1930s and 1940s) I had No Idea that a non-staged recording of Hitler was made and survived. That is amazing. My grandson started college his Sept. and his major is German.