I this he's only putting a joke here. Read some comments here, you'll find someone says he spoke german for argentina, spoke Indonesian for poland, spoke english for turkish.😂😂😂😂
He spoke German when the Argentenian flag was there I understood what he said in German he said Ich spreche Deustch which means I speak German and I can confirm this because my goal is to speak German fluently
@@PjoterHero its a joke and maybe u will answer smth like:oh its a joke i didnt laugh? Maybe u didnt laugh but its a joke and is funny to others not everyone thank you and sorry if i sound rude.😇
As an Azerbaijan who knows Turkish and Russian I can say that "Oi sPeaK turKIS" is very real word in turkish. However, he really talked in Russian at the last moment by saying я говару по русски which means "I talk in Russian" still funny tho.
@@bagrnadruhou6034Bro its that eagle or whatever, not a clap clap. Btw albanians, sory for not being a bird special, dont go after me if its not an eagle
“ jag 👹 prata😩 svenskA😒 ” as a half Swedish I burst out laughing, I’m also half Romanian and the accent was pretty good there, live in Norway and the accent you could work on.. :) (unimportant info)
Me: understood him in Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese Chinese, even without knowing Portuguese or Italian but wow you speak a lot of languages like I'm a poliglot cause I also speak Japanese I can proove that THIS IS COMPLETELY REAL congratulations and great video continue like that
same 1. Chinese (Mandarin) Formal: 您好 (nín hǎo) Informal: 你好 (nǐ hǎo) The Chinese greeting is 你好, pronounced as nǐ hǎo. 你 means “you” and 好 means “good.” 您好 is more formal and should be used when greeting a person more senior than you. Otherwise, you’d come off as haughty and disrespectful. Chinese is big on respect, and not just for persons of authority, but most especially for elders. 2. Japanese Formal: こんにちは (Konnichiwa) Informal: やあ (Yā) Konnichiwa is the general, widely-used term to say “hello” in Japanese. You can use it at any time during the day or night, and it would be appropriate for both formal and informal settings. However, if you want to say the equivalent of “hi” or “yo” or “hey” in English to greet a close friend, you can use やあ. But if you want to be time-specific, you can use “お早うございます” (ohayō gozaimasu) in the morning, “今日は” (konnichiwa) in the afternoon and “今晩は” (konbanwa) in the evening. When meeting a person for the first time, you want to say “初めまして” (hajimemashite), which roughly translates as “nice to meet you.” 3. Korean Formal: 안녕하세요 (Anyeonghaseyo) Informal: 안녕 (Annyeong) 안녕하세요 (anyeonghaseyo) is the standard Korean greeting for practically any occasion and any time of the day-morning, afternoon or night. 안녕 (Annyeong) is a casual greeting you can use with friends, family and those younger than you. 4. French Formal: Bonjour Informal: Salut Bon means “good”-as in bon appétit (good appetite) and bon voyage (good journey). Jour means “day”-as in soupe du jour (soup of the day)-and so bonjour literally means “good day.” The term is flexible and can be used both for formal and informal settings. 5. Spanish Both Formal and Informal: Hola But not to worry, saying “hello!” in Spanish is simple enough. We almost all know to say “hola.“ Just remember that the letter h is silent in this case, just like it is in the English word “heir.” To be time-specific, you can use buenos dias (good morning), buenas tardes (good afternoon) and buenas noches (good night). But, of course, you can use hola in both formal and informal settings, at any time of day or night. 6. German Formal: Hallo Informal: Hi Hallo is suitable for just about every situation, but you can also say Hi or Hey when greeting people in informal settings. 7. Italian Formal: Salve Informal: Ciao Saying Salve is a safe option when you don’t know what setting you’re in and falls more into the formal side. Ciao is probably the most recognized Italian greeting. It’s an informal interjection and can mean both “hello” and “goodbye”. 8. Hindi Formal: नमस्ते (Namaste) If you’re in the Indian subcontinent, you can get away with greeting everybody with just one word: Namaste. Hindi greetings are not time-specific, so you can use this one any time of the day or night. You use it to begin and end interactions with both friends and strangers, young and old. The expression is paired with a slight bow of the head. Place both palms in front of the chest in a prayer-like position. As you say “namaste,” bow your head slightly. This gesture is called the pranamasana gesture. 9. Greek Formal: Χαίρετε (Herete) Informal: Γεια σου (Ya Sou) Χαίρετε is not that widely used and mostly in formal settings when talking to politicians, teachers etc. Γεια σου is a very common form of greeting in Greece. 10. Russian Formal: Здравствуйте (Zdravstvuyte) Informal: Привет (Privet) While Здравствуйте is mostly used in formal situations, Привет is suitable for greeting a friend or your peer. 11. Portuguese Formal: Olá Informal: Oi If you want to say “hello” to someone you don’t know in Portuguese, saying olá is the safest option. A casual, informal way to say “hi” is Oi. 12. Arabic Formal: مرحباً (Marhabaan) Informal: مرحبا (Marhaba) The most commonly used word for “hello” in Arabic is Marhaba while Marhaban is a little bit more formal. 13. Latin Formal: Salve Informal: Heus Latin was the dominant language of the Roman Empire from 6th century BC to 600 AD. When the Roman Empire collapsed, Latin evolved in the former constituent nations into the various languages that we know today. Romance languages like French, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish and Romanian consider Latin as their parent tongue. That being said, would you like to know what it would be like to greet someone during Roman times? You’d say, “salve.” That’s hello when talking to one person. If you were talking to several people, you’d say, “salvete.” 14. Inuktitut Both Formal and Informal: ᐊᐃᓐᖓᐃ (Ainngai) Inuktitut is an Eskimo-Aleut language spoken in Arctic territories and the topmost span of North America including Alaska and Northern Canada. The nearest equivalent to hello in the language is ainngai, which can be used to signify both “hello” and “goodbye.” 15. Tsalagi (Cherokee) Both Formal and Informal: ᎣᏏᏲ (Osiyo) The Cherokee are a Native American tribe indigenous to Southeastern states like Georgia, Tennessee, North Carolina and South Carolina. Osiyo is how the Cherokee say “hello.” Hello in 95 Languages Around the World Want more? Here’s a long list of ways to say hello in many different languages: Language Formal Hello English Reading Informal Hello English Reading Afrikaans Goeie dag Goo-uh dey Hallo Hah-lo Albanian Tungjatjeta Toon-jat-yeh-ta Tung Toong Amharic Selam Se-lam Arabic Salam aleikoum Ass-suh-lah-muh alay-kum Marhaba Mar-ha-ba Armenian Barev Bah-rev Pari yegak Pah-ree yeh-gak Azerbaijani Salam Sah-lam Basque Kaixo Kie-sho Egun on Eh-gun on Belarusian Добры дзень Doh-bri dzin Прывітанне Pri-vee-tan-nye Bengali নমস্কার No-mo-shkar Bosnian Zdravo Zdrah-vo Ćao Chao Bulgarian Здравейте Zdra-vei-te Здрасти Zdra-sti Burmese မင်္ဂလာပါ Min-ga-la-bar ဟယ်လို Hai-lo Catalan Hola O-la Cebuano Kumusta Koo-moos-tah Hi Hi Chinese (Simplified) 你好 Nee how 嗨 Croatian Dobar dan Do-bar dan Bok Bok Czech Dobrý den Dob-ree den Ahoj Ah-hoy Danish Goddag Goh-dahg Hej Hey Dutch Goedemiddag Goo-duh-mih-dahg Hallo Hah-lo Estonian Tere Teh-reh Filipino Kamusta Kah-moo-stah Hi Hi Finnish Hyvää päivää Hoo-vaa pie-vaa Hei Hey French Bonjour Bon-zhoor Salut Sa-loo Galician Ola Oh-la Georgian გამარჯობა Gah-mar-joh-ba German Guten Tag Goo-ten tahg Hallo Hah-lo Greek Γεια σας Yah sas Gujarati નમસ્તે Nah-mahs-tay Haitian Creole Bonjou Bon-joo Salut Sa-loo Hausa Sannu San-nu Salama Sa-la-ma Hebrew שלום Sha-lom היי Hi Hindi नमस्ते Nah-mas-tay Hungarian Jó napot Yo nah-pot Szia See-ya Icelandic Góðan dag Goh-than dahg Halló Hal-lo Igbo Ndewo N-deh-woh Kedu Keh-doo Indonesian Selamat siang Se-lah-mat see-yang Hai Hi Irish Dia duit Dee-ah gwit Haigh Hay Italian Buongiorno Bwon-jor-no Ciao Chow Japanese こんにちは Kon-nee-chee-wah どうも Doh-moh Kannada ನಮಸ್ಕಾರ Nam-as-kara ಹಾಯ್ Haay Kazakh Сәлеметсіз бе Sah-leh-met-siz be Сәлем Sah-lem Khmer សួស្តី Soo-aste Korean 안녕하세요 Ahn-nyeong-hah-se-yo 안녕 Ahn-nyeong Kurdish Silav See-lav Selam Se-lam Kyrgyz Ассаламу алейкум As-sa-la-mu ah-lay-kum Салам Sah-lam Lao ສະບາຍດີ Sa-bai dee Latin Salve Sal-vay Latvian Labdien Lab-dee-en Sveiki Swey-kee Lithuanian Labas Lah-bahs Sveiki Svey-ki Luxembourgish Moien Moy-en Salut Sa-loo Macedonian Здраво Zdra-vo Чао Chao Malagasy Manao ahoana Mah-now ah-wah-nah Salama Sa-la-ma Malay Selamat tengahari Se-lah-mat ten-gah ha-ri Hai Hi Malayalam നമസ്കാരം Nah-mas-kah-ram Maltese Bongu Bong-goo Maori Kia ora Kee-ah or-ah Marathi नमस्ते Nah-muh-skar Mongolian Сайн байна уу Sain bai-na uu Nepali नमस्कार Nam-as-tay Norwegian God dag Goh dag Hei Hey Pashto ଶୁଣିବେ Sa-lam Polish Dzień dobry Dzyen dob-ri Cześć Chesht Portuguese Bom dia Oh-la Oi Oi Punjabi ਸਤ ਸ੍ਰੀ ਅਕਾਲ Sut sree a-kal ਹੈਲੋ Hello Romanian Bună ziua Boo-nah zee-wah Salut Sa-loot Russian Здравствуйте Zdra-stvooy-tye Привет Pree-vyet Samoan Talofa Tah-lo-fah Serbian Здраво Zdra-vo Ćao Chao (Chao) Sesotho Dumela Loo-meh-lah Shona Mhoro Mho-ro Sindhi سلام Sa-lam Sinhala ආයුබෝවන් Hay-lo Slovak Dobrý deň Dob-ree den Ahoj Ah-hoy Slovenian Dober dan Doh-ber dahn Živjo Zhee-vyo Somali Maalin wanaagsan Is-kah war-an Sida wadanka See-da wuh-dank-a Spanish Buenos días Bway-nos dee-as Hola O-la Swahili Wilujeng enjing Ha-ba-ree Hujambo Hoo-jam-bo Swedish God dag Gohd dahg Hej Hey Tajik Салом Sa-lom Tamil வணக்கம் Vah-nak-kam ஹாய் Hi Telugu నమస్కారం Na-mas-tey హాయ్ Hi Thai สวัสดี Sa-wat-dee Turkish Merhaba Mer-ha-ba Selam Se-lam Turkmen Добрий день Sah-lem Ukrainian Вітаю Vi-ta-yu Привіт Pri-vit Urdu سلام Sa-lam ہیلو Hello Uzbek Salom Sa-lom Vietnamese Xin chào Sin chow Chào Chow Welsh Bore da He-lo Sut mae Sit my Xhosa Molo Mo-lo Yiddish העלא Ha-lo Yoruba Báwo ni Bah-woh Zulu