Europeans Try To Pronounce The HARDEST Words in European Languages!!

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Do you think European languages are difficult?

Today, 6 Europeans tried to pronounce the hardest words in 6 languages!

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🇺🇸 Jessica @0.25kimchi
🇮🇹 Guilia @giuvember
🇩🇪 Ria @riapauline
🇪🇸 Andrea @andrea_ruizrodriguez
🇫🇷 Yeon Seul @shinyeonseul02
🇳🇱 Luna @lunabkl
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The moment the first german word showed up i knew exactly how the reaction would be like 😂, but i like how Ria explained the word and meaning carefully 😊

henri
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8:47 Strangely enough, "Squirrel" comes from Old French "Esquireul", which became "Ecureuil". The older version might be more pronounceable for an English speaker.

tibsky
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In Dutch you can also combine words forever, just like in German. So Kreuzschlitzschraubendreher in Dutch is Kruiskopschroevendraaier, and Schifffahrtsgesellschaft is Scheepvaartmaatschappij. In theory a boat company that transports screwdrivers would become a Although no one would use it, it is theoretically correct.

tammo
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At first i was confused as to why the Belgian girl has difficulty with Germanic words because i thought she was Flemish. Turns out she's Wallonian.

realDunalTrimp
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Reads title: "Hardest words..."
Meanwhile the Belgian girl: "Aujourd'hui" and "Chateau"

Arvidholders
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The Italian girl is so nice and talented, we need to see more of her!

milantehrandubai
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We italians can be sometimes accustomed to some German words and sounds, since German is one of the languages officially spoken in Italy, by minorities who speak that.

pile
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As a German: German is a very effective language!
A few examples:
Flugzeug (airplane) - "Flug" = fly + "Zeug" = stuff -> an airplane is a stuff to fly with
Bahnsteig (train station) - "Bahn" = train + "steigen" = enter -> place where you enter the train
Suppenteller (plate) - "Suppe" = soup + "Teller" = plate -> plate only for soups
Gehweg (sidewalk I think) - "gehen" = walk + "Weg" = way -> way specific for walking

And that's also why it is so easy to create "new" words
Just think of the purpose that the word should have and then put the words behind each other - tada new German word ^^

melissaflettner
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I would say that Dutch actually find it easier to understand German words and what is not always difficult is English where many words even have the same meaning or in short it is the Germanic languages ​​that find it easier to understand each other but it must be said that there are two groups of Germanic languages: North Germanic languages ​​(Icelandic, Swedish, Norwegian, Faroese and Danish) and then the West Germanic languages ​​(German, Dutch, English, Scottish, Frisian and with German there are many more dialects) there was also East Germanic namely Gothic with Romance languages ​​being more closely related French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and Latin are also part of it the rest of Europe is Slavic, Baltic, Albanian, Greek, Celtic, Armenian these are Indo-European languages ​​then come the Turkic languages, Finnish-Uralic languages ​​and also the Caucasian languages ​​and the Basque language
And there is Maltese which belongs to the Semitic language like Arabic for example, these are only the languages ​​that are in Europe because Indo-European also belongs to Kurdish, Persian and Hindi

beck
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I studied german a little, i had no idea what the word screwdriver would be in german, lol, my reaction was basically the same as the girls 😂

Charles_
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I lived in Western Germany nearish to the border of France—though the languages are quite different there are many shared words and a few similar pronunciations.

Swimdeep
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The Belgian girl didn't know most people have heard "chateau" and are familiar with "eau" and "eaux" being pronounced as "o."

binxbolling
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Wow Andrea from Spain got bangs and looks cuter🤭😍

yrslvy
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My favourite language in the world is Spanish, and IMO it's also one of the easiest to read bc each letter in the alphabet has only a single sound. I think the only letter that has two (only 2!) different sounds is letter "g" which changes depending on its placement in a word.

ybgy
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I’m Dutch and did this while travelling. This word always works pretty well: ‘geschreven’, which means ‘written’. But with the hard G (also in sch) and rolling R.

psymetric
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Thank you for such projects! The channel is really great! 😍

Someone_else_u_know
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German is similar to Náhuatl in the sense of putting many words together 😅

ILOVEDAVIDCAVAZIS
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Something tells me if I order a Kreuzschlitzschraubendreher the next time I'm at a bar, I'm unlikely to get a vodka and orange juice.

EddieReischl
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In Belgium they also speak Dutch (and partly German)

kaans
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Is it just me or would these 6 girls make such a good kpop group

blobby.the.fat.dinosaur