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Steamed Hams but it's Middle English 

Seetor
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My contribution to this meme, coming with a mere 3 years' delay. Enjoy. Check below for translation notes and Middle English transcript!
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_______________________________________________________
TRANSLATION NOTES:
[1] The first name Seymour is derived from the family name Seymour, (famous member’s include Jane Seymour, third wife of Henry VIII) which in turn is derived from the french place Saint-Maur. Given that I could find members of this line whose name was spelled Seymour all the way back in 1340, I left it the same.
[2] Chalmers derives from the French “de la chambre” or “of the chamber”. I decided to localise Chalmers as a probable point in the middle of that transformation. Also "superintendents" in an educational sense obviously didn't exist in feudal England, given their lack of state schooling, but "people who quality control other people's labour" did, and they were called "overseers" :D
[3] just a literal translation, think "rapid food cuisine"
[4] wī̆ʒelfulle was a godsend of a find translating this. It means “cunning” or “deceitful”. I was lost finding a translation for devilish because the relatively devout Medieval englishmen did not use the word - or anything similarly hellish in meaning - in any positive sense. Wī̆ʒelfulle derives from wī̆gle, an Old English term describing (paganistic) divination rituals, which survives in current English in the terms “wile” and “wily”. It also sounds evil! :D
[5] After the disaster in this video • How to Wish Someone Ha... I didn’t really feel like attempting to sing in a video again. Comment something with “oh great bard” if you want me to attempt again anyway!
[6] Clams as such are native to America and were thus not known to the Angle-Saxons. While they did have various kinds of shellfood, I chose to stick with “clams” given that the term is Middle English in origins, meaning “pincers, clamp”. The shellfish alternative would have been “scalop” - of hopefully obvious definition.
[7] “Hamburgers” were only invented 100 years ago. Given that they seem to be named for the city of Hamburg (not containing any ham as they are) I chose a word that had been used in relation to Hamburg in Medieval times.
[8] “Patent” is actually middle english in origin! Very exciting, i didn’t think so. It used to mean “ a document granting an office”.
MIDDLE ENGLISH TRANSCRIPT:
docs.google.co...
Music Credits:
"Renaissance" by Audionautix.
See you next time, lords and ladies!

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26 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 384   
@FinalUrvogel
@FinalUrvogel 6 месяцев назад
"Not Doncaster, it's a Scarborough expression" absolutely killed me.
@RobotWillie
@RobotWillie 5 месяцев назад
They are about the same distance from each other as Utica and Albany are, 95 miles for them and 70 for Doncaster and Scarborough. Not too different and a good substitute for places that actually would have been speaking Middle English.
@brightthembo
@brightthembo 5 месяцев назад
Not me crying while watching this in Doncaster right now 💀
@danielconnor8547
@danielconnor8547 5 месяцев назад
YORKSHIRE!
@amirmichaelroyer
@amirmichaelroyer 18 дней назад
@@danielconnor8547 White Rose, White Rose!!!
@tutuanimacoes6220
@tutuanimacoes6220 6 месяцев назад
"SEYMOUR ÞE HOUSE BIÞ AFLAME"
@OfficialUKGov
@OfficialUKGov 5 месяцев назад
AFLAMÉ
@GrinningNimbus
@GrinningNimbus 5 месяцев назад
ÐE
@RickJaeger
@RickJaeger 5 месяцев назад
No, mother, hit bith mereli the northern lichts.
@LoveProWrestling
@LoveProWrestling 5 месяцев назад
Halpa halpa!
@cccyanide3034
@cccyanide3034 8 дней назад
"No, moþer. It biþ barely the Norþern lichts."
@adamk203
@adamk203 Год назад
I had to use both the English and German parts of my brain to understand this...
@Seetor
@Seetor Год назад
Isn't that what English is, the redheaded stepchild of Deutsch und Französisch, empfangen in einer Nacht in der die Eltern heftig gestritten haben und settled their argument in a loveless night of passion.
@carved_cuts
@carved_cuts Год назад
I'm Dutch and trying to learn German. I have one extra Germanic language to rely on AND I STILL BARELY UNDERSTOOD IT. Maybe 3 is too much for my last braincell to switch between lmao.
@WolfgangDoW
@WolfgangDoW Год назад
​@@SeetorEnglish is 3 languages in an overcoat, it stalks other languages in dark alleyways and rifles thru their pockets for loose vocab
@klhaldane
@klhaldane 6 месяцев назад
@@Seetor I like: English is the result of Norman men-at-arms trying to get dates with Saxon barmaids.
@MrMortull
@MrMortull 6 месяцев назад
@@WolfgangDoW More like a clown car of dialects that commit highway robbery.
@drrodopszin
@drrodopszin 6 месяцев назад
This is how it feels to listen to Scottish people if English is not your first language. "Now he totally speaks English... No, it's Danish again."
@richardcope5066
@richardcope5066 5 месяцев назад
This is how it feels to listen to scottish people is english is your first language.
@rustyshackleford83
@rustyshackleford83 5 месяцев назад
English is my first language, but having never lived in Britain this is still what Scottish sounds like
@jn1mrgn
@jn1mrgn 6 месяцев назад
It's like listening to German and Dutch where randomly there are sentences that make sense to me in English.
@SirThanksalot_1
@SirThanksalot_1 6 месяцев назад
with some old Norse added to it
@heart04winds19
@heart04winds19 6 месяцев назад
That's middle English for ya
@Anonymouthful
@Anonymouthful 6 месяцев назад
English is such a hodgepodge of languages
@batchampa
@batchampa 5 месяцев назад
English (on its Germanic side) and Dutch are very closely related
@HowDoYouTurnThisOn_
@HowDoYouTurnThisOn_ 5 месяцев назад
Thats a good reason to consider english an universal language, its a cocktail of cultures.
@matthewthedford2041
@matthewthedford2041 Год назад
"Oah god, meen roast is forSHET"
@hotelmario510
@hotelmario510 6 месяцев назад
I love that "But what if..." hasn't changed in almost 1000 years.
@U.Inferno
@U.Inferno 5 месяцев назад
Iirc what would have been pronounced "Hwat"
@NankitaBR
@NankitaBR 5 месяцев назад
And "of course" as well
@PhthaloType
@PhthaloType 5 месяцев назад
@@U.Inferno I tell ya hwat
@tommyatomic222
@tommyatomic222 5 месяцев назад
@@U.Inferno well tbf, it's still pronounced as 'hwat' in lots of modern dialects and accents
@sergeyromanov5560
@sergeyromanov5560 5 месяцев назад
he pronounced it wrongly, that's why
@gizmo835
@gizmo835 11 месяцев назад
The pronunciations for "muscles", "welcome", "light" and "time" are HILARIOUS.
@Irondragon1945
@Irondragon1945 6 месяцев назад
mooskles
@hashbrown777
@hashbrown777 6 месяцев назад
​@@Irondragon1945immediately reminded me of vinesauce playing Hard Time
@thomase13
@thomase13 6 месяцев назад
Imagine there was a time when English was actually pronounced as it was spelled!
@millenniumhandandshrimp2610
@millenniumhandandshrimp2610 6 месяцев назад
@@hashbrown777 An exercitation forr de mooskles. It's a good thing i can't be randomly transported to dark age Albion, because i would be condemned as possessed for maniacally laughing without end.
@LilacMonarch
@LilacMonarch 5 месяцев назад
at this TEEM of year??
@helioabc
@helioabc Год назад
Coming straight from watching Steamed Hams in Biblical Hebrew lol
@AP-su9oc
@AP-su9oc 6 месяцев назад
Same
@nickj5451
@nickj5451 6 месяцев назад
Lmao same
@Irondragon1945
@Irondragon1945 6 месяцев назад
Same
@Bacony_Cakes
@Bacony_Cakes 6 месяцев назад
same also
@Rolando_Cueva
@Rolando_Cueva 6 месяцев назад
​@@Bacony_Cakes are you Bharati?
@the_boi_4203
@the_boi_4203 6 месяцев назад
missed opportunity to use a medieval cover of the jingle
@SableTdragon
@SableTdragon 5 месяцев назад
y o u
@the_boi_4203
@the_boi_4203 5 месяцев назад
@@SableTdragon Ȝe ar nerdy innoȝ to be war of dublez of langagis efte þat semez
@AlastorTheNPDemon
@AlastorTheNPDemon 6 месяцев назад
"Why be there smoke a-breakin' from that oven, Seymour?" - A salty sea dog
@Seetor
@Seetor 2 года назад
This video was INSTANTLY copyright claimed. Fair, to be honest.
@RoyalKnightVIII
@RoyalKnightVIII Год назад
You were eating into Disney's coveted Norman English market
@Halfendymion
@Halfendymion 6 месяцев назад
That means it's canon
@smarttravel3144
@smarttravel3144 Месяц назад
By whom, Chaucer?
@TauDel
@TauDel 5 месяцев назад
“In this part of the realm” fucking killed me.
@radscorpion8
@radscorpion8 6 месяцев назад
I can imagine Steamed Hams being performed in front of a crowd in the middle ages now
@feragosmyxixarashtra7948
@feragosmyxixarashtra7948 5 месяцев назад
Or imagine a Classic Greek Tragedy in Athens that is just Steamed Hams but in the Ancient Hellenic Context. It's a Greek Tragedy because at the End his House is burned down by his own Gall to usurp Fate's Role in who cooks an unforgetable Feast for their Esteemed Guests, Skinner being punished by the Gods.
@The_name105
@The_name105 Год назад
"Frikli-fode cookerie" has to be one of the funniest phrases in middle English. I can guess that it means fryly food cookery/fried food cookery.
@utvpoop
@utvpoop 6 месяцев назад
F*da cozinha
@dissonanceparadiddle
@dissonanceparadiddle 6 месяцев назад
This really takes me back to when I was a young lady of under 200 years
@diandradeeke
@diandradeeke 6 месяцев назад
you some kind of vampire or what??
@who-ny5oe
@who-ny5oe 5 месяцев назад
I'm the about the same age as you. I served Napoleon dearing the nopolic wars.
@feragosmyxixarashtra7948
@feragosmyxixarashtra7948 5 месяцев назад
@@who-ny5oe You must be For Real considering how Bad your English is, Frenchman.
@Magic_beans_
@Magic_beans_ 5 месяцев назад
@@who-ny5oeDid you really, or is that just part of your image to sell hotel rooms?
@leociresi4292
@leociresi4292 4 месяца назад
Steamed Hams, but in Middle Earth!
@JonBrase
@JonBrase 6 месяцев назад
"Steued" goes back and forth between a fairly historical pronunciation and one that sounds unaccountably like modern German.
@Seetor
@Seetor 6 месяцев назад
"unaccountably" sir i have an accent
@oliversherman2414
@oliversherman2414 5 месяцев назад
This is like if English, German and Dutch all combined into one language
@prestonjones1653
@prestonjones1653 5 месяцев назад
Well they all used to be one language so that fits.
@oliversherman2414
@oliversherman2414 5 месяцев назад
@@prestonjones1653 true
@Magic_beans_
@Magic_beans_ 5 месяцев назад
You’re not wrong, and chances are the mix would change depending on where exactly you were. There’s a story, I believe shared by the printer William Caxton, of a couple traders sailing out of London via the Thames. They stop somewhere around Kent, not that far away in modern terms, and roll up to a farm asking to buy eggs. Unfortunately the farmer doesn’t understand what they want. What are _eggs_ , is that French? The other trader has to interject and say they’re looking for _eyren_ .
@chavesa5
@chavesa5 2 года назад
Tolkien would be proud
@Seetor
@Seetor 2 года назад
That's so incredibly nice of you.
@DianaTaffie
@DianaTaffie 2 года назад
I understand not a single word of this. Impressive work!
@NotraceOfRay
@NotraceOfRay Год назад
German is my native language and I can understand a whole lot. It's like a mix of Dutch, German and some Nordic languages.
@artifactU
@artifactU 9 месяцев назад
i understood a few like occouring, lights, & ov course thyne/thine (idk how its spelled)
@millythespugwit9051
@millythespugwit9051 6 месяцев назад
@@artifactUit’s usually spelt ‘thine’
@potatoheadpokemario1931
@potatoheadpokemario1931 5 месяцев назад
Surprising because it's like 50% English words
@Crescent_2001
@Crescent_2001 2 года назад
The phonetic reminds me of German and Dutch. Great work!
@AddMoreQuarters
@AddMoreQuarters 2 года назад
There's a reason for that.
@abhainnxv1554
@abhainnxv1554 Год назад
I wonder if it’s because English is a Germanic language at its core, and it only doesn’t sound like that nowadays cuz of Roman and Nordic influence on the vocabulary
@InterestingStuff888
@InterestingStuff888 Год назад
English is a bastard child of Germanic, Celtic and Norman languages and dialects
@Twiddle_things
@Twiddle_things Год назад
It sounds like Danish at points, too!
@visicircle
@visicircle 6 месяцев назад
Makes sense, as Dutch Frisian is the closest living language to English.
@TheValeyard92
@TheValeyard92 6 месяцев назад
I like the idea that Chalmers is a Donny lad.
@millenniumhandandshrimp2610
@millenniumhandandshrimp2610 6 месяцев назад
"Chalmer's a donny, donny soldya'! 'es got a gunn in 'es holsta!"
@richardpaxford5792
@richardpaxford5792 6 месяцев назад
"....eeeeh, Yorkshire?" 😂😂😂
@nomercyformayhem2506
@nomercyformayhem2506 6 месяцев назад
As a german this sounds like listening to a danish person
@InfiniteDeckhand
@InfiniteDeckhand 5 месяцев назад
You have never heard anyone speak Danish before, then.
@willyb7353
@willyb7353 5 месяцев назад
😂😂😂
@burmecian123
@burmecian123 6 месяцев назад
Steamed hams, but it's the redwall animals you could never understand.
@Miners666
@Miners666 5 месяцев назад
Now I need Steamed Hams in English spoken 700 years in the future.
@Crux___
@Crux___ 5 месяцев назад
I love how these remixes of steamed hams almost always have their own spin on the “regional dialect” bit to go with the theme lol
@weeradge5771
@weeradge5771 2 года назад
1:47 Bi God's bons, the dailect is from Yorkshire where they say "go up road" instead of go up the road. Good heavens!
@Seetor
@Seetor 2 года назад
EXPOSED
@AvitalShtap
@AvitalShtap Год назад
You know these hamburgers are VERY "SEMBLABI"
@o00nemesis00o
@o00nemesis00o 6 месяцев назад
From ‘semblance’
@millenniumhandandshrimp2610
@millenniumhandandshrimp2610 6 месяцев назад
I must use this word in everyday speech now.
@theoryismypraxis3538
@theoryismypraxis3538 2 года назад
MOOSKLES
@killdozerjr
@killdozerjr Год назад
ooh yiss
@jet-it9cr
@jet-it9cr 6 месяцев назад
poomp de mooskles yiss ...
@Irondragon1945
@Irondragon1945 6 месяцев назад
i'm getting stronger
@readuth1488
@readuth1488 6 месяцев назад
Me mooskles are getting beeger...
@АлексейТабаков-ы8в
@АлексейТабаков-ы8в 6 месяцев назад
Meanwhile how do you pronounce "muscles" word: masels
@SonOfaChipwich
@SonOfaChipwich 5 месяцев назад
Now I understand why Dutch is the way it is.
@Ozymandias2x
@Ozymandias2x 5 месяцев назад
It's always important to stretch before and after exercising your MOOSCLESS.
@Alexlalpaca
@Alexlalpaca Год назад
At some point my brain just got into middle English mode and started perfectly (I assume) understanding everything. Also hi Seetor, I found your channel.
@Seetor
@Seetor Год назад
What's up my french Englishwoman.
@Alexlalpaca
@Alexlalpaca Год назад
@@Seetor In a call with thee
@imperfectly_megan
@imperfectly_megan 6 месяцев назад
For me it's because I have been watching a lot of steamed hams recently so I have it memorised lol.
@HCRAYERT.
@HCRAYERT. Месяц назад
What dialect of Middle English þid?
@kellyriddell5014
@kellyriddell5014 Год назад
Reading the subtitles helps so much in understanding. I see so many comments of people saying they didn't understand it, but I'm thinking they must not have the subtitles on. The only German word I recognized was "ich," but with the words written out, I caught a lot more than I would have by just listening.
@prestonjones1653
@prestonjones1653 5 месяцев назад
THERE ARE SUBTITLES?!?!?!
@MrXHCx
@MrXHCx 5 месяцев назад
I thought everyone in the internet basically knew steamed hams by heart.
@saucerr3691
@saucerr3691 2 года назад
Oh you spoony bard.
@radscorpion8
@radscorpion8 6 месяцев назад
spoony?
@WobblesandBean
@WobblesandBean 5 месяцев назад
​@@radscorpion8 FF6 joke
@KARKATELCESARENVIADODESA-pv4yd
@KARKATELCESARENVIADODESA-pv4yd 6 месяцев назад
So this is they spoke as pre norman invasion? I hope someone makes one in reconquista spanish for us, at my college library they literally have transcripts Alfonso X's law codes in the original language and boy is it impossible to read. They also have complete viceroyalty correspodence of a few centuries ago and that hurts my eyes to read too.
@Seetor
@Seetor 6 месяцев назад
it's right after the norman invasion. It's still noticably germanic, but the French influences have been creeping in
@o00nemesis00o
@o00nemesis00o 6 месяцев назад
Pardon me for a moment!
@ArcanineEspeon
@ArcanineEspeon 5 месяцев назад
Þhine victuals biþ ſucking beeþechurgers, ßeymour.
@Trollface696
@Trollface696 9 месяцев назад
Me after the song was not translated: My disappointment is immeasurable and my day is ruined.
@Seetor
@Seetor 6 месяцев назад
listen i sang on this channel before which is why i know not to do that anymore
@kawaiilotus
@kawaiilotus 6 месяцев назад
​@@Seetorcould you type it out at least please?
@scoovy9170
@scoovy9170 2 года назад
I'm German and for some reason I can understand so much...
@Seetor
@Seetor 2 года назад
Beweist was die überlegene Sprache ist.
@Goblinking-ps7fs
@Goblinking-ps7fs 5 месяцев назад
"ME ROAST IST FOR SHIT"
@leociresi4292
@leociresi4292 4 месяца назад
Ep!😂
@blockman3508
@blockman3508 6 месяцев назад
This takes me back. Reminds me of the good old days before King Hal let the kingdom go to shite. My father’s farm sits untended in Anjou because of him. Here’s hoping Lord York’s protectorate will be long and fruitful.
@u.kw1461
@u.kw1461 5 месяцев назад
Chaucer rolls in his grave in laughter
@Envy_May
@Envy_May 5 месяцев назад
this is the first time i have actually watched steamed hams i think
@Koelacanth-t8y
@Koelacanth-t8y Год назад
I speak English and I took some classes in German so I understand all of this due to watching way too many steamed hams edits.
@ThePhaseMaster
@ThePhaseMaster 5 месяцев назад
I love how pretty much no matter what remake you watch, chalmers still walks in and goes “A-“ 😂
@feragosmyxixarashtra7948
@feragosmyxixarashtra7948 6 месяцев назад
I love how as more Time passes, the less German/Dutch/Frisian-alike English becomes.
@ivoernstsen7819
@ivoernstsen7819 5 месяцев назад
1:18 Henry VII beyond the grave: Why is your wife laying dead in the stove with her head chopped off. Henry VIII: Uhh, that's not my wife, that's a doppelganger, trying to take my wife's place. Grr, doppelganger.
@praeamble
@praeamble 6 месяцев назад
1:08 Ah yis, the mooskles are getting stronker, ooOoOo...
@adrianaslund8605
@adrianaslund8605 6 месяцев назад
It's never been more apparent that english is a germanic language. "Muskles" sounds like when the swede VargSkelethor says "Muskeles" instead of "muscles" as a joke.
@bugsephbunnin4576
@bugsephbunnin4576 5 месяцев назад
I'm a spanish native speaker and I'm very impressed by the fact that you can indeed understand what's been said.
@earthboundisawsome
@earthboundisawsome 5 месяцев назад
It's incredible how... Easy this is to understand
@JorWat25
@JorWat25 5 месяцев назад
I saw the title of this and was expecting the flowery Shakespearean English most people mean when they say 'old English'. Imagine my surprise when it turned out to actually be authentic Middle English...
@Filbi
@Filbi Месяц назад
0:27 hate it when meen roast is for shent
@pajrc1234
@pajrc1234 5 месяцев назад
I love that you have footnotes it really adds to the middle english experience
@sylph8005
@sylph8005 6 месяцев назад
I’m in a Chaucer class right now and I’m loving this
@tanimation7289
@tanimation7289 6 месяцев назад
Is this the same English used to write the story tales from Canterbury?
@MusicalGirl2311
@MusicalGirl2311 5 месяцев назад
Yes, this is the English that Chaucer spoke.
@gothandannoyed684
@gothandannoyed684 5 месяцев назад
So sad he didnt translated the jingle
@Btester2
@Btester2 5 месяцев назад
Its like the video is having a stroke. Im hear english and german with gibberish in between.
@Kromiball
@Kromiball 5 месяцев назад
I hear German, English, and a dash of French.
@Sage-xr1on
@Sage-xr1on 4 месяца назад
Doncaster mentioned
@DraculaCronqvist
@DraculaCronqvist 6 месяцев назад
The funny thing is, this is eminently far more understandable to modern German speakers than today's English. Old English even more so.
@kuhatsuifujimoto9621
@kuhatsuifujimoto9621 5 месяцев назад
i can't imagine middle english using the word kalfs for the anatomical part. i feel like a cognate to shin or something is more likely.
@arcticfox1985
@arcticfox1985 5 месяцев назад
i heard fourchette when he said his roast is ruined and my mind is now elsewhere
@captainpalegg2860
@captainpalegg2860 Год назад
0:59 it makes me so happy that you left the audio of chalmers yelling "seymour!" as-is, indicating that it's still part of the song. a lot of other "steamed hams" videos treat it as an actual part of the story, and that always bugs me.
@BenersantheBread
@BenersantheBread 9 месяцев назад
Isn't it both?
@pablovirus
@pablovirus 5 месяцев назад
But... it's very much part of the dialogue
@andrewwestcott9172
@andrewwestcott9172 5 месяцев назад
I'd be highly surprised if 'Patented''was ever used in middle english.
@Команданте
@Команданте 6 месяцев назад
😂😂😂Я сначала подумал, что немецкий Шекспир, приди Порядок наведи!
@Oatmeal_Mann
@Oatmeal_Mann 2 года назад
Hambers Beautiful
@curkinho
@curkinho 5 месяцев назад
I love how, despite being a completely different language, phonetically is closer to romance languages than current english, i wonder what happened (i know almost nothing about british history)
@Sarum9nich
@Sarum9nich 5 месяцев назад
Sounds like a mix between english, french and german.
@swamppigeons6101
@swamppigeons6101 2 года назад
My ears have truly been blessed
@Voltanaut
@Voltanaut 6 месяцев назад
It's so weird understanding like 20% of the words and half understanding another 20%, and the rest being this weird German thing.
@Magic_beans_
@Magic_beans_ 5 месяцев назад
“The house be aflame!”
@leociresi4292
@leociresi4292 4 месяца назад
“Helpe! Helpe!”😂😂😂😂
@seanmorris440
@seanmorris440 5 месяцев назад
0:52, proof that everyone sounds American when they sing.
@roland.w
@roland.w 5 месяцев назад
I think I might call hamburgers "Hambers" now!
@burtpenguin
@burtpenguin Год назад
speaking a small bit of german and being a native english speaker i understood it completely, there were a few words that were unfamiliar but that was uncommon and only happened a few times
@datfloof2732
@datfloof2732 5 месяцев назад
I ACTUALLY UNDERSTOOD THIS 😮
@23Stork
@23Stork 6 месяцев назад
Scarborough mentioned!
@kiltedanais
@kiltedanais 6 месяцев назад
You can really see/hear English's Germanic origins.
@tbirddddd
@tbirddddd 5 месяцев назад
This is what German class sounded like in my brain in year three of high school after half-assing it knowing I would not pursue it further.
@onen_21173
@onen_21173 5 месяцев назад
i like how he says muscles
@EcclesiastesLiker-py5ts
@EcclesiastesLiker-py5ts 9 месяцев назад
This must continue forever.
@zegamingcuber857
@zegamingcuber857 5 месяцев назад
Can't believe you didn't translate the jingle
@AgelessStones
@AgelessStones 6 месяцев назад
Rly nice stuff, this makes me want to hear it in old english too
@fenrirgg
@fenrirgg 5 месяцев назад
As a Spanish speaker I find this version of English pleasantly easy to understand 😂
@limonsolitario740
@limonsolitario740 5 месяцев назад
I could understand certain parts only with subtitles (English is my second language).
@EmeraldShine13
@EmeraldShine13 5 месяцев назад
BI GOD BON’S WHAT BIÞ OCCURING IN DERE
@Itosalix
@Itosalix 5 месяцев назад
Yorkshire. I didn't even think of that way! Correct.
@agin1519
@agin1519 Год назад
Pro tip: if you can’t follow it put in the captions!
@Nebulasecura
@Nebulasecura 6 месяцев назад
All thats left is to see if someone made this in Shakespearean time period English lmao
@GNOMESARECOMINGFORYOu
@GNOMESARECOMINGFORYOu 5 месяцев назад
Ah, so this is that high culture stuff people were telling me about.
@elsakristina2689
@elsakristina2689 2 года назад
This is hilarious.
@Seetor
@Seetor 2 года назад
Thanks!
@elsakristina2689
@elsakristina2689 2 года назад
@@Seetor ^^
@henrymapleton
@henrymapleton 7 месяцев назад
My brain is telling me this is just a Koifish video i'm watching
@Seetor
@Seetor 6 месяцев назад
No I am human
@mertensiam3384
@mertensiam3384 7 месяцев назад
Kinda wish English had pronunciation like this instead of whatever it has now
@Seetor
@Seetor 6 месяцев назад
Wait till you find out about German
@mertensiam3384
@mertensiam3384 6 месяцев назад
@@Seetor German is the final boss
@Arthur-pc1eh
@Arthur-pc1eh 5 месяцев назад
​@@Seetor What do you mean? German is straightforward. Yes it might be hard to pronounce certain sounds or combinations, and some vowels (mostly for Romance speakers like me), but it's 90% more consistent, regular and predictive than English. After learning basic German in a couple of months you can know the pronunciation of almost every new word without a problem. With English, there are almost no rules, and you might still be learning how to pronounce (or to spell) certain words in your 20's. And being a native speaker!
@Seetor
@Seetor 5 месяцев назад
The point was German is that.
@nikolthomas2544
@nikolthomas2544 6 месяцев назад
This is so cool and well done. I was kinda hoping for a translation of the 'song' bit , even if you didn't sing it.
@panicfarm9874
@panicfarm9874 6 месяцев назад
Steam hams but somehow Palpatine has returned
@Samdesam.
@Samdesam. 2 года назад
I understood a little bit maybe because I am Dutch?
@gizmo9133
@gizmo9133 6 месяцев назад
The fact i can half understand it hurts my brain
@amazingfireboy1848
@amazingfireboy1848 5 месяцев назад
I'm fluent in both English and German, yet I didn't understand many words from this video...
@SPAnComCat
@SPAnComCat 5 месяцев назад
That makes me want to Learn more about Middle English!
@eldoblixtlo1058
@eldoblixtlo1058 16 дней назад
Now we know what accent Bulk Bogan actually spoke when he pronounced "muscles"! Although he was born 40 BC and is over 2000 years old, it would be likely he spoke in combination of old and ancient accent which explains his bizarre accent.
@skeptale
@skeptale 6 месяцев назад
Ok but why does he say "mooscles" just like Bulk Bogan
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