Today we tried to Pronounce the hardest word from 6 Languages! Telugu, English, French, Hindi, German, Portuguese! Can you do it? #brazil #india #france #germany #usa
@@bharath2508 look dravida means the land surrounded by dravya ie liquid (in Sanskrit language)... And c'mon not every indian or bharathiye is into those Marxists propaganda called two race theory... And dravida and sanskrit are known to be born by Shiva's Damaru , when one side amoe sound it takes the form of sanskrit while the other side's sound tales the form of dravida bhaasha.. And agastya muni was the one who learned the other part of the damaru ie. Dravida bhaasha and he brought it to the south... And not everyone is Racist like those DMK and their followers who are federalist hiding anti-national , anti-hindu.
Fun fact- Only Indians know that both of them pronounced it wrongly😂. Both of them are of Sanskrit origins, plus the first Indian word( from Telugu language, which is actually a Dravidian language) pronounced as VishleshaNa( the N is a retroflex N, not a dental n as she pronounced). It means Analysis. The 2nd Indian word( from Hindi, which is an Indo-European language) is Durlabhta( the bh is an aspirated b sound). It means Rarity. That Hindi girl didn't pronounce it as Bh, but as b or normal labial b. Both of these sounds don't actually occur in European, African or even South-east Asian languages, so its understandable, why they chose not to pronounce them. But, they were both wrong in their pronounciations. Telugus and Hindi speakers, please like this comment so that it helps steer away confusion. I think, we should not let it go, people ought to know what's right and wrong, no offence to the crew and participants.
Retroflex sounds do actually occur in Norwegian and Swedish in Europe. My own dialect of Norwegian has two retroflex plosives, a retroflex nasal, a retroflex flap, and a retroflex fricative.
@@infinite5795 Only one of the sounds you mentioned are really not found elsewhere, as I said retroflex consonants, including the retroflex nasal exist in at least 2 European languages. Retroflex consonants also occur in Australian languages
Irrespective of that it's always funny that in general Hindi people don't even understand what such word are, even though it's a Sanskrit word and the exact same word exists in Hindi ... 😂😂 The same happened with the Hindi girl in the video. And the exact same word visleshaN (विश्लेषण) is present in hindi as well... But General populace started to use more English or urduized words and slowly are losing the language as the years passby. It is fair to say that Sanskrit is more preserved in the south India especially in Telugu, Malayalam than in the colloquial Hindi (the majority language in the North)... Especially because we still use many Sanskrit words, grammar as Sanskrit is very well integrated and assimilated and adapted in Telugu especially.... And we Telugites have good knowledge in Telugu language in all : Native Telugu based, Sanskrit based and Dravidian based vocabulary.
And even though this video is about pronounciation, the Telugu girl pronounced it as విశ్లేషన instead of విశ్లేషణ. 😂😂 Language is deteriorating year by year
It's present in Bengali/Bangla also, বিশ্লেষণ or Analysis I have learnt Sanskrit but I forgot it, it's funny because that's how I learnt to read Hindi words and numbers, before I only used speak Hindi but after Sanskrit I can read and write Hindi as well. But I am ashamed to say that I forgot Sanskrit and I don't have many time to learn it now, maybe in future. Currently I am learning Japanese.
I am a Telugu and i love my language to the core being beautiful in many ways. Love ur work girls, appreciate the collaboration which turned out to be great fun. Btw Telugu is called Italian of the east, but considering how old Telugu is ancient relative to Italian, Italian should be called " Telugu of the West" :)
That’s why said By the great emperor Sri Krishna Devaraya “ DESHA BHASHALANDU TELUGU LESSA “ which means TELUGU is the best language through which a man can express his feelings without any confusion and misunderstanding with proper meaning and easy to pronounce and read…. Very happy to be a Telugu man…
If Einstein says string theory is the best of all theories, his opinion makes all others take an interest in it. Like ways..... Krishna devaraya was a polyglot. He can write poems in Sanskrit, Tamil, ...etc. Although he is kannada native he said Above words.
@@awellculturedmanofanime1246😂😂😂 since when indian nationalist became pseudoscientist sorry but those so called pseudoliberals ain't any science follower or any type of great guys they're like those harvardians humanist who does nothing except shouting and displaying hypocrisy... And may the gods bless your brain cells
Contrary to my experience I have Telugu people very obnoxious and nosy...there is one telugu lady in our apartment makes fuss all teh time. Plus when I went to Hyderabad I saw some very nosy people as well....Ther must be some sweet people in telugu for sure but such kind of obnoxious people would have bee making they life hell too
1:45 I love how the Indians preserve their scripts. In Indonesia, even two neighboring languages in one island can have separate scripts like Javanese ꦧꦱꦗꦮ and Sundanese ᮘᮞ ᮞᮥᮔ᮪ᮓ but unlike India we don’t use them anymore since we’ve adopted the Latin alphabet 😔 9:06 yeah the thing is, « paralelepípedo » was probably chosen by the Korean producers because it’s hard for THEM because East Asians (Chinese, Japanese, Korean) can’t really tell the difference between L and R. But definitely there are even more difficult words than « inconstitucionalissimamente » in Portuguese.
Because we indian only speak and write in our own languages in regional level. It's like European union , every state is like country of Europe. And another main thing is most of our language have grammer, literature etc in ancient times itself so it easy to preserve. Even every regional languages have their own news channels, paper, radio, movies , we study our native language in schools too. Every state gives first preference to their regional languages then only hindi or english.
@@santhoshv3028 each of our languages has its own literatures as well, but we have basically put them aside since 1928 to promote our national language, Bahasa Indonesia. The result is a very successful lingua franca that unites ALL Indonesians because unlike in countries like India or Malaysia, all Indonesian peoples across 4 time zones vowed to use one unitary language so we don’t argue among ourselves. Of course this success is at the expense of our regional languages 😢 Indonesia is the world’s second-most linguistically diverse nation after Papua New Guinea, but many of our minority languages are dying, along with their history, knowledge, and culture; and part of the problem is because our national language is just too strong.
@@kilanspeakswell we Indians are united by English too. We speak, write in our mother tongue. But when we speak to other language people in India - In South we speak English, in North we speak either Hindi or English. And I thought India and Papua New Guinea comes in top 2 for languages. Didn't know Indonesia was there. How many languages do you guys have? We have like 2000 languages and 19,000 dialects.
@@aasamspb967Papua New Guinea is the most linguistically diverse country in the world, with approximately 840 languages used. Second on the list is Indonesia, with 712 different languages used throughout the country, followed by Nigeria with 522 spoken languages.
The actual pure Telugu word for Viślēṣaṇa(విశ్లేషణ) is Viralimpu(విరలింపు). The same can be said for Namaskaram(నమస్కారం) which is actually a Sanskrit loan. But original Telugu has many many words for it like 1.Kaimodpulu (కైమోడ్పులు) 2.Chemodpulu (చేమోడ్పులు) 3.Etikollu (ఏటికోళ్ళు) 4.ERagudu (ఎఱగుడు) 5.Girigillu (గిరిగిళ్ళు) 5.Origa (ఒరిగ) 6.Chaagilinta (చాగిలింత) 7.Jobillu (జోబిళ్ళు) 8.Tenkanamu (టెంకణము) 9.Bedisa (బేడిస) 10.Girigllu(గిరిగిల్లు) 11.Jothalu(జోతలు) 12.Kaichapu (కైచాపు) 13.Chemogapu (చేమొగపు) 14.Chevippu (చేవిప్పు) 15. Kaijobu(కైజోబు) 16.Kaivippu(కైవిప్పు) Etc.,, Out of all those words for Namaskaram from the vast literature of Telugu, we opted for a Sanskrit loan. P@thetic 😑
@@vee936 తెలుగు గురించి రీసెర్చ్ చేస్తుంటా! తెలుగు అంటే చాలా ఇష్టం నాకు. తెలుగు గురించి చాలా తప్పుడు సమాచారం మనకు నేర్పినారు పుస్తకాల్లో! తెలుగు సంస్కృతం నుండి వచ్చింది అనేది పెద్ద అబద్ధం.
Just for fact. India have 5 language family but predominantly mainly 4 language families Dravidian in south india Indo-Aryan in north, west and east india Tibeto-burmanese in northeast and northern Himalayan regions ( also bhutan, eastern bangladesh, nepal and Myanmar) Austroasiatic in few regions of india ( northeast and east) Tai- kradai in northeast india( very low in population)
The Dravidian language family reaches all the into Afghanistan and far south-east of Iran, namely Brahui. Also, Indo-Aryan reaches all the way down south into the Maledives and Sri Lanka. The Indian Subcontinent is not as easy to comprehend as some people would like to.
Crazy how deeply brainwashed are Indian from the south about Aryans vs Dravidians. Literally some white guy coming up with the idea in a bath tub tossed the term with zero evidence none whatsoever Just on the basis on color or rather different shades of brown. Do u see can much difference between both the Indian girls???
"Paralelepipedo" is very easy. The most difficult words in Portuguese are those that end in "ão", "ões". Example: Pão (bread), feijões (beans), exceção (exception).
@@L.Ferrosé bem cruel pra um gringo pronunciar pão. Em 99% dos casos, eles cometem um pequeno acidente ao falar essa palavra, mas que muda totalmente o significado dela 😂
If they are going to have the word Worcestershire, they should have at least had a British person to pronounce it correctly. The word comes from the name of a town and the sauce while it does have molasses is used to give an umami flavor from the anchovies and fermentation.
I didn't understand the word choice for that, to me that was the least American thing, we prefer A1 sauce. 😁 I guess the Korean producers of the show don't really see the difference between the different English-speaking nations. 🤔 Next, they'll have an Irish explain why they call the fast-food joint "Maccas".😜
@@Sayitlikitiz101 Well, for many years my Genuine American hamburgers use Worcestershire sauce. But I never ever pronounced it the way the American girl does. I wonder where she learned how to do it. America is large and regional accents do exist.
Hi gals because you people are taking about Telugu .Telugu is one of the oldest language around 3000years old. Earlier foreign scholars used to call Telugu as ITALIAN OF THE EAST. It is the only language in india which can frame sentences if a word is given from any language around the world.There will be 100 poets and scholars and they give few words and one person need to frame sentences using all those words this process is called SHATAVADHANA .Persons who can talk Telugu can learn any language very fast and easily.Telugu language has 52 letters and the base language is SANSKRIT.
There are a lot of Telugu words which are extremely difficult to pronounce. Even a regular Telugu speaker find it difficult to pronounce and you find such type of words in Telugu poetry.
Yeah, it's a weird one to give an American, TBH. I don't think I've ever heard an American *not* pronounce the last syllable of a similar place name as "shire", as if from Lord of the Rings, rather than "sheer".
@@7rollface Also in England, every "shire" is pronounced as shuh/sher, the Worcestershire person you saw will have said shuh but just in their accent lol. Yorkshire is York-shuh/York-sher, Goucester is Gloster-shuh/Gloster-sher etc
I wish you can made one video with 11 Indian girls from different Indian states. 1) Hindi-Urdu 2) Tamil 3) Punjabi 4) Bengali 5) Gujarati 6) Marathi 7) Malayalam 8) Kannada 9)Telugu 10)Odia 11) Sanskrit
@@mybadbrochill02 Which other region of India is not mentioned at all? Not a single state out of 8, not a single language out of 200+ and u're telling me to chill! Why don't u calm down ur typical mainlander ignorance & apathy towards 💚 North-East India.
It’s pronounced like “worst-uh-sure” not shire, and is usually said fast and mumbled which makes it even more difficult for foreigners. She clearly doesn’t eat the sauce lol no ma’am it’s more like a dark preserved fish liquid. It’s runny and pungent in taste and smell, though molasses is an ingredient, it’s not sweet or thick. It’s absolutely disgusting on its own, but mixed into other sauces it provides a flavor profile like no other. I think it’s vinegar, molasses, anchovies, and spices as the main ingredient and it’s fermented.
Omg thank you! I learnt the word at my German school in English class as "wu·stuh·shuh", so I was kinda surprised hearing the shire here and was like "did I learn it wrong??" haha I never used the English sauce or eat it, but had the Japanese worcester sauce on Okonomiyaki or Yakisoba and it's so yummy. And that sauce is sweet and also thick though (maybe cause there is tomato and sth else in there). Maybe she mixed those two up?
I have been told by English co-workers that the city name of Worcester is pronounced like "woo-ster" and the "shire" part is prounced like the word "sure" and then it's all slurred together to make it more like "woost-sure." I grew up saying it as "woo-ster-sure" and still default to that if I run across it in a sentence or something without taking a sec to remember how I've been told by English folks that it "real is said."
Through, though, tough, thorough, thought, throughout these are very difficult words to say for portuguese speakers, because for many brazilians they seem to have the same sound, because even their aesthetics are similar... Observation: For people who learn portuguese, as in their languages words do not have accents, it is difficult for them to speak words that require the circumflex accent and the acute circumflex accent, as well as words that use 'CL' such as 'Claro' as well that they don't use in their language.
Telugu is the most spoken language of south India, and also the fastest growing Indian language in the USA, it's considered as the sweetest and musical language, every word ends with a vowel and also Indian classical carnatic music is taught in Telugu, Italian nicole d Conte said it's Italian of the east, దేశ భాష లందు తెలుగు లెస్స, ఎంత మంది తెలుగు వాళ్ళు ఉన్నారు ఇక్కడ 💙
Why didn’t they use an American place name that is hard to pronounce rather than an English one that she can’t pronounce if they were going to have an American in the show?
Both Durlabhta and Visleshana are Sanskrit words. And most Indian languages have Sanskrit influence which makes it easier for Indians to learn each others language. The grammar rules are mostly Sanskrit based. 60% of the words too.
This comment nails it. There is completely arbitrary and imaginary division of indo-aryan and dravidian language groups, because there is no such thing.
@@bora--boraWhile the original comment is correct, your comment is completely incorrect. Hindi is closer to English than it is to Telugu, grammatically and lexically speaking. That's, of course, if you stick with native words instead of borrowed words (such as Sanskrit ones in Telugu's case). It's just unfortunate that, due to the perceived high status of Sanskrit among the pandits and such (which is BS IMO), many of the Dravidian languages opt for a Sanskritized vocabulary rather than sticking to their native one. Tamil, of course, is a glaring exception to this, and does a really good job of preserving its Dravidian roots.
Well my boy Let me teCh u something thats wat they want u too knw 😂 sanskrit has 30 percent of tamil languge becz 😂😂 Tamil is the okdest languge even 3k old than sankrit Ao yeah U should learn. Some history hahaah
@@tstcikhthysDravidian roots? Bruh u know the grammar in Telugu nd Kannada is almost the same as Sanskrit nd like an illit ur sayin hindi is closer to English lol Try checking out the Varnamale in Telugu nd Sanskrit
The first Telugu word was actually a loanword from Sanskrit.... Really sad that the Hindi speaker couldn't understand that. In Hindi it would be 'Vishleshan'
This is Aryan and Dravidian Language families is bogus. In India we never used to differentiate North and South Indian languages as belonging to different language families. This is purely a British way to look at India that is unfortunately still being taught to Indians through English education.
@@vamshikallem948 oh boy . Let settle it down we count 1 Yek 2 do 3 se 4 chahar 5 panj 6 sas 7 haft 8 hast 9 Noh 10 dah and I'm not even Indian an Iranian now say how do you count in Telegu then in Hindi? You will found Iranian languages are closer to Hindi than telegu which has nothing in common except for loanwords.
😂 cute. I'm from Germany and experienced how difficult it is to pronounce foreign sounds myself. Don't ask how long it took me to pronounce the 'th' properly☺️ But learning languages is worth the effort.👍🏻
@@SugiSeufz Leider😥 Dabei hilft es so sehr, die "Fremden" besser zu verstehen. Und ich meine hier nicht nur den Inhalt ihrer Aussagen. Überhaupt ihr Verhalten, wenn du so willst, ihre Kultur. Das schließt dann den Kreis zur Sprache als Kulturgut. Und auch hier zeigt sich wunderbar, dass wir in einem Kulturgeflecht leben, wenn wir sehen, wie viele Wörter aus anderen Sprachen wir importiert haben oder abgewandelt benutzen. Gerade in benachbarten Ländern fällt es stark auf. Wir leben in einer Zeit, in der sich viel tut. Ich bin gespannt, in wie weit sich das auf die Sprache auswirkt.
As an Indian and Teluguite, I can say both the Indian girls did pronounce correctly to their extent. Coz, in this genz nobody is caring about the stressing part in a word. Ideally in "Vishleshana" the last syllable should be pronounced as "Ana" which is a nasal one. Similarly for "Durlabhtha" the hindi pronounciation includes stressing on "Bh" and "Tha". Btw, That french girl is a swagger 😎
@@chinnaramgariakash0029 English lo Teluguite ani petta bro Telugu vallu ante Non-Telugu peeps ki ardham kaademo ani.. Whatever it is, you understood the point right!?
Woww.. who ever came up with this IDEAAA.. ! just fantastic! one of the funniest and engaging videos I had ever seen on RU-vid! Great job! the creative team behind this.. and also the players!
Just because the languages have been grouped together in a large family does not mean that they are simpler. English+German = German group / French+Portuguese= Roman Group / Hind= Indo-European-group
Telugu has a lot of words derived from Sanskrit and other ancient Languages. It's not 'Dravidian'. The Hypothetical term 'Dravidian' doesn't stand ground if you dig deep about the origins of Langauges used in Southern, Central and Northern India.
In Wisconsin, we say "were stuh sure" for "worcestershire". We use it in bloody mary cocktails, with vodka, tabasco sauce and tomato or V8 juice, plus secret ingredients. The German lady gave good advice for pronouncing German, think of the individual words making up the long word, like the Brazilian lady did, and go ahead and take your time saying it.
@@CaptainumericaIt’s a county in England. It’s pronounced “Woo - stah - shah”, as the English don’t pronounce their Rs as hard, they soften them to a short A sound. I’m Canadian but I have a lot of British friends.
And we use Worcestershire sauce in Bloody Caesar cocktails, with vodka, Mott’s Clamato™️ (clam broth and tomato juice), hot sauce (usually Tabasco), served with ice in a large, celery salt-rimmed glass, typically garnished with a stalk of celery and wedge of lime.
Fun Fact: French Hindi German Portuguese and English are all part of the same language family(Indo-European) and all share MANY words as they originate from proto-indo-european The odd one out is Telugu, a Dravidian language, and Telugu alongside other Dravidian languages like Tamil, Malayalam, and Kannada are the true indigenous languages of India, so thank you guys for including them
Fun Fact: French, Hindi, German, Portuguese and English are in very different language groups, same family means not the languages are easier to understand
So basically you are saying the other Indian girl up from North is European??? Open your eyes to the fact. Not to some political ideology. Dravidian vs Aryan is political idea. What scientific evidence have you came across in 2 centuries to prove the bullshit British gimmick.
According to the Census of India of 2001, India has 122 major languages and 1599 other languages. The Government of India has awarded the distinction of classical language to Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam, Odia, Sanskrit and Tamil. This status is given to languages that have a rich heritage and independent nature.
The most fun job I had was working for Visa, doing credit authorizations to 30 different countries in 10 languages every day. The Germans and Norwegians were the nicest. So friendly and warm! Also, the Turks were FUNNY! What a great sense of humor, they have. Now you see why I had so much fun.
Am really so happy to see two Indians girls in this video I really like them I want to see them more in up coming videos . Love from India ❤. The video is really so good I enjoyed a lot
Laksha bhakshyalu bhakshinche kukshimbarudiki okka bhakshyam bhakshinchuta oka lakshyama It is one of the difficult word/sentence formation in telugu That means ”For the person who can eat lakhs of foods, one food is difficult or what” But for me it's easy.
India actually has more than 600 when you factor in regional dialects. I think there are 23 official languages, including English- which some parts of India teach first officially
Essentially, in India, each state has its own language. The saving grace is, because it used to be a British colony, English is used as a lengua franca to communicate between states.
What a precious video, in concept and execution. Next time, though, any chance of losing the music except during the transitions? It is really competing with the nuances of their speech.
Dude said they speak English in Mumbai...bro its Marathi and Hindi here...English? Maybe she's talking about the "South Bombay" people. Also India has more than 200 languages. Officially, 22 languages are recognised as national languages and they are not at all similar to each other, vocabulary is different, alphabets are different and even grammar sometimes
Do they normally speak english amongst themselves in south bombay? I would assume hindi would be most used in mumbai since that's where bollywood came from.
@@krato6468 nah the place belongs to Maharashtra, a Marathi speaking state, and Mumbai islands have a huge population of Agri and Koli tribe. People speak Marathi more than Hindi as there is a huge population of Marathi people. Businessmen and immigrants try to learn Marathi and Hindi...here you find something called "Broken Hindi + Broken Marathi" something similar to Pigeon English. English is spoken only in formal locations and events. South Bombay is the region where all rich people live so yeah there English is more spoken with their native language
which schools are you talking about? lol, in my parents' time they didn't even have English to begin with, and my father studied in a really good school
@@a_random_guy_V Aqui no estado do RJ, o francês teve forte influência desde 1800s (quando D. João e sua corte vieram para a cidade do RJ em 1808) até o final dos anos 90 devido a sua influência cultural mundial, chegando a ser mais importante do que o inglês e obrigatório até os anos 60s. Daí vem o nosso "r" com som francês de "rr". Eu sou de 1981 e tive inglês e francês até a formação, e isso numa escola particular no subúrbio, mas era ensinado em escolas públicas também.
@@a_random_guy_V French was mandatory in Brazil for many decades. Both my parents had to study French in their public schools and both of them came from really poor areas.
I like that all the girls are so friendly nature and have no perception over the different languages or over One another they look so friendly.. I love that cause in same state / being in the same country people think they are majority people in the country with ego.
There are considerably more than two hundred languages in subcontinental India. There are 23 official languages, and somewhere between 500 and 800 languages spoken at home, depending on who you ask. Ethnologue reports 456, but a linguistic survey run by the Indian government counted 780. Most are Indo-Aryan or Dravidian, but there are many other language families represented, and a number of language isolates.
I really enjoyed the video because i am from india and i saw 2 indians in the video i want to see them more cause they are funny and made the video more fun... I hope i can see them in upcoming videos ❤
Lexyo said "expecially" with a "ks" sound, which I have mostly encountered in Michigan, after living in other states. Based on their English pronunciation, if I weren't told their nationalities, I would have guessed that Julia is American and Joana is British.
I’ve been learning French for the last 3 years and I’m still struggling with pronunciation sometimes. I hate the word l’environnement, because it has 3!!! nasal sounds in 1 word 😥. Yaourt is an easy one though.
Lucie(french) you guessed it right Telugu language is known as “Italian of the East” by Niccolò de' Conti who visited the vijayanagara empire and many multilingual poets admired the beauty of telugu and said its a sweetest language.