We have English everywhere but the main language is Maltese, but in Malta, you don't need Maltese it's fine if you don't know Maltese and you know English. There is so much traffic because the country is really small and there are so many foreigners which makes the country over-populated.
You made a good observation! Apart from the issue of cost of living, it seems there no one from an African Country studying in Malta. Why not choosing to interview an African?
If the goal of the video was to encourage people to go visit Malta for studying English it fails really bad, I mean based on the accent and how fluent is the people in this video, I would not recommend at all anyone to take an English course there. It seems that most of the people in this video are in Malta just because they wanted to take a course as an excuse to trip to Europa or just because it was the only place that they could afford or because it's the only place that was not requiring a visa. But for real immersion and real improve in your English better go to United States, Canada, England or Ireland. I mean if you want to promote Malta do it for the weather, the people or anything else but the English course, because they don't speak a good enough English if you compared with the countries that I mentioned before.
Hi, Maltese person here. A lot of foreigners who study English in Malta, hardly study really. They're known to party all the time. Places like St Julian's (known as being a nightlife village) is basically ram-packed full of these "English" students. I'm very skeptical much studying actually ends up taking place lol.
We have English everywhere but the main language is Maltese, but in Malta, you don't need Maltese it's fine if you don't know Maltese and you know English. There is so much traffic because the country is really small and there are so many foreigners which makes the country over-populated.
@@sikekick9995 Just because English is also our native language, doesn't make us English. Most Irish people's native language is English - I'd like to see someone surviving after calling them "English"
First of all, if your English is quite bad , Malta can't help with that. Maltese people don't know proper English ,although they will most likely tell you that they do.Broken English is common amongst the vast majority of the population even with so called "English teachers". Don't be persuaded by their TESOL , CELTA ,Matsec etc qualifications.They are crap! And secondly, Malta is more expensive! As a British person who lived in both countries, I can verify that UK is much cheaper , especially in the food and real estate sector. Finally, DO NOT GO TO MALTA FOR EDUCATION. Their educational system is an absolute mess ,which requires immediate attention.They have a very long list of problems in this sector ,so I'm going to skip the list and explanation. NOTE: If you're reading this and offended,just remember that facts are not insults.The truth hurts.
@@giovannipaoloboyd-trevisan752 actually i have that is why i am explaining it. also the mat sec exams are much more difficukt than the gcses and not all schools in malta are bad (there are bad schools but there are also horrid schools in britain). Also i would like to remind you that britain is veryyyy big and that ou should be more specific about what part of it you are talking about.
You're mixing up good English with British English. The Maltese don't speak British English but Maltese English. If you know the first thing about linguistics, you know that there is an endless number of varieties of English, and none is more valid than another. Indian English is a thing, Maltese English is a thing, as are South African, Nigerian etc. Each variety has its own vocabulary. Code switching is also a standard linguistic phenomenon found in any bilingual society. In linguistics it's certainly not considered "wrong" to code-switch