@@hugobenamranedurand7836 I don't agree, French people are lovely, especially in rural areas. Parisian people can go fuck themselves (I live 20 minutes away from Paris and it's not as fun as you think grrr)
I think English has such weird impressions for animal noises because the sounds are turned into actual words to represent them, instead of just copying the sound
@@reynhacoezy5510 The reason why I've always thought people say that is because roosters sometimes make that "er-er-er-er-errrrrrrrrrr" sound (you know the one) and it matches up with the tune of it. Also, roosters are cocks.
When they said New York pigeon, I kept imagining Phoebe from Friends where she pretended to call Monica and Chandlers apartment as the pigeon who tipped over the bowl of lottery tickets 😂
I don't think making animal sounds and laughing is flirting besides the French guy with the fuller beard and American girl, but you could feel the chemistry between most of them.
i know the animal songs in French cause the song "el pousson piou" or something like that that the hs french teacher made everyone listen to except i took Spanish not french so... lol
These French people are stupid and weird. A duck does not say "coin coin". Stop making up random sounds and use the NORMAL sounds they teach you in school.🙄😒
@@fuzzyotterpaws4395 you're the stupid one here, insulting people based on what language they speak, I bet you can only speak english "The normal sounds they teach you at school" are you a fucking troll or so stupid you don't even know shool is different in every country ? Pff
It's actually fascinating. (I'm gonna sound like a smartass in the next statement so, uh, just a warning.) Did you guys know that in Korea, pig noises are 'ggul ggul' (in a low voice) and in Japan, its 'p/buhi p/buhi' and meanwhile in the U.S., its 'oink oink'. ←(It's the same in the Philippines!)
Hello! I am from Midwest America and we love the French here you guys have really influenced us so much ❤️ I love meeting the French foreign exchange students who travel to our school :)
That girl did not make a very informed decision, did she? The French "r" is quite difficult for a native English speaker as well. She should have chosen a language with easygoing r's :)
At this rate she wouldn't want to learn the romance languages May be romanian but its part slavic ...... I mean compare to other romance languages(aside of romanian because i don't know for them) French "R" are more sweet and we don't use that much "rolls" compare to spanish or Portuguese French has sweeter and a dryer pronounciation
As a French I always laugh at it. It's French, people pronounced the Rs for 1500 years, just pronounce them, it's fine. The French used to pronounce it and some still do till the late XXth century.
@@Billoybong2 Okay so I did a little bit of research, and apparently, JYP has never explicitly stated who the official visual of Twice is. However, many people seem to agree that Tzuyu is Twice's "official" visual. I thought Nayeon would be the visual because she is usually in the centre, but she is known as the "face of the group" (according to some sources). The difference between the two (from what I've read) is: - that the face of the group is the person who represents the group - the centre is the person who is usually in front or in centre - the visual is the groups most visual/striking member So, based on what I have found, Nayeon is the centre and face of the group, and Tzuyu would be the visual.
@@olivia2786 omg thanks so much for clearing that up. Although Tzuyu is indeed beautiful, I personally think Mina or Sana is the visual. Perhaps it's my penchant for Japanese girls lol
@@Billoybong2 You're welcome ☺️ I wish RU-vid would give me notifications on comments so I can reply to them a lot sooner... Oh and also! Apparently, Twice's 'visual line' is TzuNaMi (Tzuyu, Nayeon, Mina), so you are correct in Mina also being a visual ^^
In Brazil we also say cocoricó for roosters, and our duck sounds are similar to the french ones, but written differently. We say "pruu" for pigeons, "piu piu (pew pew sound?)" for baby chickens and I think our frogs sound similar to the american ones lol
i love this so much. i speak 3 languages fluently and english and french are my first 2 so i guess i never realized how i switch around my animal sounds depending on who i’m speaking to 😂
no one cares but here’s how I say it: (and timestamps) 0:10 “quack quack” 0:40 “kikeriki” 1:05 “oink oink” 1:30 “gurr gurr” 2:02 “quaaack” 2:41 do baby chicken make any noise? 3:09 “bsssssssssss”
Yes they do, baby chicks say "pío", like the song says "los pollitos dicen pío cuando tienen hambre y cuando tienen frío". The other sounds are spot on, where are you from?