Hi 🌏!!! Thank you for watcing our video! Show us your ❤ with Subscribe, Like👍 & Comment and Share! 🇩🇪Elena / ellikubi 🇫🇷Marina / rrinayah_ 🇬🇧Lauren / laurenkatemassey 🇪🇸Claudia / westclau
😂 we german love French . Over the years France became a very close country to us . French is also often usen in our music market mixed german French songs are quiet popular
@@catyhell724 Except for the people that study French. Most of the people I know that did, started hating the language. I studied French for 6 years in highschool and I can't stand French at this point lmao
These girls in a movie should be like : English girl : The main character who drives the group Spanish girl : The serious and smart sidekick who has always a good idea German girl : The candid girl who proclaim speech on friendship and love French girl : The cynic and rough character who sacrifices himself at the end of the movie
@@thomaskenel2933 I was not saying she's wrong, I was not saying all French are like that. I said that these videos were good because they had these people there.
@@thomaskenel2933 je n'ai pas dit qu'elle a tort. Je n'ai pas dit que tous les français sont comme elle. J'ai dit que ces vidéos sont géniales parce qu'ils ont ces gens sur eux. Est-ce mieux ? Mon français n'est pas le meilleur :/
@@kingastaroth7912 je ne voulais pas dire qu'elle a tort, je voulais dire qu'elle n'est pas fake à faire la fausse, contrairement aux autres qu'ils font exprès d'être extravertie pour la vidéo
As a Brit who goes to Normandy a lot, I now just associate "supermarché" with those Super-Us where all the fruit and veg goes off a day after you buy it. Nothing fancy about it anymore lol.
Hi everyone, this is Elena from Germany! It was such an honor to take part in filming this video.😊 It's been so long since I could visit my home country Germany so I was so happy to introduce some German words! 😙 I hope you enjoy watching this video, and I'll see you in the next one! 🥰
The chemistry of the girls is so amazing. The French girl is so dreamy and elegant, the German girl friendly and cute, the British girl fancy and cool and the Spanish girl humble and smart.
I like it when the Spanish girl opens up a bit, she seems a bit shy, but it’s nice when she connects more with the others. I like it when Spain and France finally made “the connection” 😊
@@christophermichaelclarence6003 trop de français croient que ce patriotisme de façade est charmant mais ça ne l'est clairement pas pour les étrangers...
Lol, I swear the British girls accent just comes and goes 💀, sometimes she sounds American, sometimes she sounds like she's from England, guess it depends on where ur from in the uk.
French and Spanish are from the same language family the romance familly which is based on latin so they have many things in common even if they sound different when you see the written words you will understand that they are similar or at least having the same root. for english and german they also came from the same family and yes like the previous two they sound different but they have a common background with a lot of common vocabulary
@@Syl75it depends on the context/category of words. Because we have a Germanic base we get a lot of nature words or basic household activities/items from there, but then the Normans invaded and became the tiny elite and so our more "fancy" vocab comes from French/Latin
Fun facts: - French and Spanish are more similar to each other than the other two because they originate from the same language - Latin. - English also shares its origin with German. Both came from the West Germanic Language family. On the other hand, it also has some French influence from the Norman invasion of England.
@@_dqpb_ In Argentina BMW sounds closer to the French way of saying it. B = Be, M = Eme, W = Doble V (literally double V). I think in Spain they say W = Doble U (literally double U, though the Spanish chick says U V for W here).
Most of the time I talked to didn't distinguish between the internet and the connection to it, so most people I met just say "internet verbindung" (internet connection) or just short "internet".
@@melcurina really? I ask some people and they don't know if Wifi mean mobile internet or Wlan. What if you just have a local ethernet without an internet connection, as you see in a lot of banks? Would you call this also Wifi or Wlan? And is 2G wifi even when you can't load a website using it? I think people think about an internet connection when they use the frame Wlan. Is Bluetooth also Wifi?
I wish they had the English person on the edge. It was weird they always started with her and would go down the line but then had to come back for the Spanish person, which made it feel like she was left out.
So what? she did what they asked her to. If they didnt like to include Spanish which its one of the most spoken languages in the world dont invite her, nobody forced them to do it. I would have left. By the way I am from Latinamerica. And yes I think you are snobs.
@@dianapoveda3343 Didn´t she say something positive... like she found her cute?? Or did I misunderstand something? o.O (I´m not native) And who is a snob and why? Just curious ;)
I don't see what people are saying about the French girl...she just seems like a normal reserved person. I don't see any attitude or sassiness. She's literally smiling the whole time and being friendly enough lol. Sheesh people are dramatic
spanish and french are closest to what its actually pronounced like, its made by a dutch company by a indonesian-dutch person and we also say it the way spain and france say it, wi as in nintendo wii and then fii with the same sound just an F
Me encantó todo de este video. Finally feel like I “belong” somewhere, most part of my genes are European, grew up speaking Spanish as my main language, English as a second, and started studying French since I was 14. German, well, I just started loving it because of opera and classical music; and I find a lot of similarities between French and Spanish through Catalan, so I feel it’s kind of easy to understand. German sounds sooo sweet and interesting to me 🙈 All four girls seem to be nice, funny, and I love listening to them speak in their native languages, so thanks for making this video!!! 😊👍🏻😍❤️🥰
In Estonian🇪🇪: Germany- Saksamaa Spain- Hispaania United Kingdom- Ühendatud Kuningriik France- Prantsusmaa BMW - we say pretty much the same as Germans Volkswagen - same again with German, but without German accent. :D Chanel- same again Supermarket - we read it is as it is Bus - Buss, more similar to Spain WiFi - same as Spain Cellphone - Mobiiltelefon/telefon Cup - Kruus/tass
@@AlexLondonSW3 Lo he buscado por curiosidad: En total, las entidades que conforman el Reino Unido son cuatro: Inglaterra, Escocia, Gales e Irlanda del Norte. Gran Bretaña, es la isla británica que abarca tres de las cuatro entidades políticas del Reino Unido: Inglaterra, Escocia y Gales.
@@ZDavidH wait. How come you hate us ?? I never heard that. I thought you didn't . We on the other hand JUST love you guys . No intermittent hatred whatsoever 😭 (please continue accepting us during summer holidays even if we're bothering you a bit ) Best 😘❤️ A random French holidaymaker currently in Catalonia
I'm French and I was so sad when France didnt' give points to spain, but I swear French people love spain, Los Franceses y los Espanoles son hermanos ( sorry if there is a msitake soy estupida )
@@ZDavidH why do you hate us ? there is no hate towards our spanish neighbors in France, Spain is a very popular country in France, we love the spanish culture and language,
@Lup 999 Do you know many germans on a friendship basis? Because that´s the difference sometimes. There are so many different kinds of ppl in Germany, exactly like in any other country, or do you get along with everyone from your country? Also I think it takes a lot lot lot of time to have insight into culture to be able to have an opinion free of prejudice, because we all have a lot of prejudices, whether we want it or not. (I might have them, I even have prejudices against myself, I´m quiet to strangers and I think they find me not very outgoing, but I open up to close friends and love companionship if it´s a good friend)
I think so too, except for the German. She is more joyous and open than the average German, but I could be wrong. And it would be great if I am. Because that girl is pure love and light, from a quick and pbly inaccurate assessment. Bless her.
Je suis de l`Allemagne et ici on dit toujours que la langue francaise est une langue très noble. Ca c`est pourquoi on peut dire ce que l`on veut en francais, les Allemands vont toujours le trouver noble ou amoureux. Beaucoup de gens hors de la France trouvent aussi que c`est la langue la plus belle du monde, surtout les Boches ;)
@@AntiFurryJihad Why do you always have to be German if you have the same meaning or pronunciation in another language? Spanish is also spoken in 🇦🇷 and Spanish also comes from Europe and most of the European language sounds identical.
That's why I love the German language. Clear and the vowels stay the same. For example the u in English: why is the sound different when you say universe and umbrella? Or bush and bus?
Usually explained by the historical diversity within the English language and spelling... but... why is Linux pronounced "linniks"? Anglophones are just used to not saying things the way they're spelled.
@@dittikke No, not exactly. The bin difference is, that the German language has way more dialects than the english language. And Martin Luthers bible translation, which was the first into any variety of german, set the start of the Development of a standard german variety which is understood by everyone and which made a united germany, as it started in the 19th century only possible. This was possible because Luther was used to dialects which belong to low german, middle high german and high german. And together with that germans continued to fit the spelling to how words were or should pronounced. And these spelling reforms never happend in the english speaking world, at least not on the bis scale. Since i would not realy count the switch from "theatre" to "theater" as an effectiv spelling reform.
The French and Spanish words for Germany being the same are not because they are both Latin languages. The Latin word for Germany is Germania, which is where English get the word (as well as Italian).
It's complicated. Franks: Ancient German tribe -> France, Francia etc Alemanni: Ancient German tribe -> Alemania etc Saxons: Ancient German tribe -> Saksa ("German" in Finnish), Sassenach ("English" in Scottish Gaelic), but also used in 3 German federal state names Angles: Ancient German tribe -> Anglia, England But: Ancient Germanic word Theode (the common folk) -> Theodisc* (common everyday things) -> Latin Deodiscus -> Deutschland, tedesco, Dutch Latin German* (related, interconnected) -> Germany, cf. also Spanish hermano/a, brother/sister Then there's the universal Slavic nemec* but I'm not gonna go there. Thing is: Germany wasn't even a country until the end of the nineteenth century (but then neither was Italy)
@@dittikke That's true, although 'Germany' has been a recognisable geographical and political entity for a long time. For most of history, we had the Heiliges Römisches Reich _Deutscher_ Nation (better known as the Holy Roman Empire), containing within it the Kingdom of Germany - interestingly known in Latin as Regnum _Teutonicorum_ , from the Teutoni tribe (as mentioned)
@@alexander9703 I only knew about the HRE, never heard the last bit. "Teutonic" is also used as a generalised term for Germanic in English, I always thought it was just a pretentious way of not saying "German" or "Germanic" but meaning it all the same. Naja, man lernt ja bekanntlich nie aus!
When Marina said they call their cell phone "portable", Claudia should have said that we say something similar here in Spain, she mentioned "teléfono" and "teléfono móvil", but most of us say "móvil" which is kinda the same as "portable" in French
Similar to french, actually. It can be "Téléphone portable", "Téléphone" or "Portable" because "Portable" means "[Something] that you can carry everywhere". We also say "Mobile" but you don't hear it often. "Mobile" in french means "[Something] that is moving" That's why the official word for "Car" ("Voiture") is "Automobile" ("[Something] that is moving on its own")
@@callmesam.4502 même si j'ai rien compris à ce que t'as dit je te corrige mdrrr, quel culot, mais je pense avoir compris ce que t'as dit sur les voitures c'est pour ça
@@thomaskenel2933 C'est ce que j'ai dit. Le mot officiel pour 'voiture' est 'automobile'. Je suis française, je sais quand même parler ma propre langue, merci.
@@thomaskenel2933 Et puisque t'as pas l'air d'être au courant, automobile ça existe autant en français qu'en anglais et ça veut dire exactement la même chose. Tout ce que j'ai fait c'est expliquer l'étymologie du mot et la mettre en rapport avec le téléphone. Et j'ai cité le mot voiture aussi. Essaie de comprendre de quoi on parle avant d'ouvrir ta bouche.
Hungarian is probably the most isolated language in Europe, so just for fun, I give you the words in Hungarian (same order as in the video): Németország (literally means German country) Spanyolország (Spanish country) Egyesült Királyság Franciaország (French country) and by now, you know the word "country" in Hungarian! BMW is pronounced as "BMV", same as in German Volkswagen - same as in German Chanel - same as in German Szupermarket - similar to English, just with the Eastern-European accent, so a bit rough around the edges Busz - same as in German WIFI- same as in Spanish Cellphone is simply "Mobil" Csésze
The Germans are more proud of the color gold in their national flag. They intend to tease the color in Belgium’s flag is yellow instead of gold. Their kind of humor😄 I‘ve been living in Germany since 2003😆
English has Germanic and Latin (via French) roots and so we often have alternative words for items through the different roots ... a somple example would be the use of 'beaker' ... a handleless cup, usually shaped like a typical plastic or cardboard cup as the German word.