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@@jeanruiz9224 La española también es latina. Si quieres decir que soy de Sudamérica puedes decir sudamericanos o latinoamericanos JAJAJA, las personas latinas son las personas que nacieron o usan un idioma que viene del latín.
For English speakers I'd say Spanish is the easiest language to learn. Why? The pronunciation and spelling is very regular. With good teaching you can probably spell 80% of all words correctly with no worries - can't say that English or French. Also the many rules actually make sense unlike English where the so-called "rules" are merely suggestions or vague guidance. Sure the idea of grammatical gender is a challenge for us but as Andrea from (E)Spain 😁 said, learning the article along with the noun makes it easier.
@@Mai2727 agree but even then for the most part even the irregularities tend to fall into groupings that make sense. Yes they are the exceptions that you simply have to learn but most times once you get the pattern you're good to go
The thing with Spanish is, yes it has A LOT OF GRAMMATICAL RULES, and its conjugation is as complex as any latin language, but the pronunciation is very simple, and following a few rules, you can spell anything without any problem (that's why spelling contests aren't really a big thing), it also helps that we only have 5 vowel sounds. About how easy or not it is to learn it, also depends on your mother tongue and how familiar are you with it ... it is easier of course for french, portuguese, and italian speakers, and for many US Americans too
Foreigners learning Spanish: "I bet mixing verbs and conjugations into a single gramatical form can not be that confusing" Spanish speakers: "Me voy a ir yendo"
@@hayati6374 Latin is definitely easier than Spanish. With Latin you don't have to worry about phonetics, pronunciation or understanding silent letters
@@adr77510 Latin is grammatically harder than Spanish. Latin evolved into Spanish while losing some rules like declensions. I think most romance language lost them if not all
I'm pretty sure Spanish is generally listed among one of the easiest languages to learn for most European language speakers. It is very phonetic (sounds as written) and the grammatical rules are very consistent. For English speakers it is true that gender can be a bit tricky, but I find the gender rules are also easier in Spanish than other languages that have these features.
Yes I thought the same, I am German and I did not learn Spanish but when she explained why she thinks it's hard to learn I saw no differences to German grammar lmfao
True, I’m a native Finnish speaker and I also speak Swedish, English and German. I just started Spanish and it is harder than English but waaay easier than German. First of all German has 3 genders and 4 cases. Spanish has 2 genders and no cases. (Finnish has 15 cases wtf). Spanish is easy when compared to other languages…
Also much easier than Czech. It has 3 genders, 7 cases, the nouns change depending on the tense, case and gender and many other grammar rules that don’t make any sense. Spanish seems to be quite reasonable to me so far.
As a serbian who speaks three languages fluently (serbian (native), english and spanish) i find spanish so easy.. but that’s maybe because we also have masculine and feminine gender and also neutral one, so that part wasn’t hard for me at all. Also, the pronunciation and writting is way easier than in english..
@Mark T. I'm Spanish and I can asure you that not all women are good looking, at all. But yes, a lot are really pretty, that's true. Although I think Japan, South Korea, India, Russia, France, Italy, Mexico or the South American countries have a bigger number of beautiful women.
Cuando alguien cuya lengua materna no es el español dice que es el idioma más fácil, es en parte gracias a que, por norma general, los hispanohablantes solemos ser gente agradable y empática y reconocemos el esfuerzo de intentar hablar nuestra lengua haciendo nosotros mismos también el esfuerzo de entenderlo, aunque este muy lejos de hablarlo bien y apenas se le entienda. Sin embargo, un inglés por ejemplo, hará poco esfuerzo por entenderte y puntualizará cada cosa que digas incorrectamente dando por hecho que todo el mundo debe hablar inglés correctamente. Obviamente es una generalización, pero lo he observado muchas veces. La realidad es que hablar BIEN el español es muy difícil, hacerse entender es facil.
Los hispanohablantes son gente primitiva, muy dados al jolgorio y al baile; pero poco a actividades intelectuales. No puede ser que su idioma sea complejo. De hecho, arriba, un usuario alemán ya nos dice que es más fácil que el francés. "Nada es verdad, nada es mentira, todo depende del color del cristal con que se mira". Y ese color puede tener un matiz azulado, grisáceo, negruzco, blanquecino, purpúreo, verdoso, amarilento, rojizo... ¿Cuántos sufijos quieres para matices de colores? El español es sencillo si vas por la orilla: "Mi cama suena y suena cuando yo te hacía pom, pom, pom" Pero si te sales de las letras de Karol G, la cosa se parece más a un tremedal con arenas movedizas.
@@susanasanchis9816 Que forma de faltar al respeto de forma tan gratuita a 580 millones de personas que hablan español en el mundo, el 7,6% de la población mundial. ¿Gente primitiva, muy dados al jolgorio y al baile; pero poco a actividades intelectuales? ¿Los hispanohablantes somos intelectualmente inferiores a otras lenguas exactamente por qué? Supongo que habrás leído la inmensa producción literaria (de diversa índole, científica, filosófica, literaria, poética...) en lengua castellana a lo largo de los siglos en ambos continentes para haber llegado a semejante conclusión tan ignorante y absurda.
Muy cierto, yo he visto que los extranjeros que apenas hablan poco español les resulta relativamente sencillo comunicarse, porque los hispanohablantes hacen un esfuerzo por entenderlos y darse a entender. En comparación cuando viví en Rusia, me di cuenta que ahí mucha gente no tiene tanta paciencia... si no eres capaz de entenderles o expresarte correctamente, a veces ni siquiera lo intentan. Además de que muchos rusos parecen no conocer el significado de "hablar despacio"
Latin American/Spanish videos have been the most entertaining in my opinion. These girls are so full of energy and happiness. I look forward to these videos every week.🔥👍👏
i think how hard it is to learn a language depends on what your native language is. I’m german, so articles aren’t a problem for me (we have masculine, feminine and neutral), but spanisch was still harder to learn than english. But way easier than french or Swahili 😅
How is it way easier to learn than French? To me they are pretty similar in terms of difficulty. Spanish is way easier in terms of pronunciation, but other than that they are quite similar.
the kissing greeting in argentina depends on the region, in buenos aires normally only one kiss is given on the cheek, but in provinces such as santa fe and corrientes two kisses are given.
I'm from Argentina, half from buenos aires and half from córdoba. I think in the countryside (which is the part in córdoba I'm from, not the city), we tend to do two kisses more often. my dad's family in from santiago del estero and they ALWAYS do two kisses, I think in the whole province. only in some parts of buenos aires they do two kisses, but mostly only one.
This is my favourite combination These four plus the Brazilian girl with them are so spontaneous ،funny and enthusiastic together Things that can hardly be found in other combinations” some participants from Europe and English speaking countries are so calm in a boring way and try to sound way too nice in conversations which creates a feeling of some very boring polite social distance that doesn’t make me fully enjoy the episode
En cierta medida me parece que es verdad el estereotipo de que los Latinos somos cariñosos. Yo pensaba que era un tontería, pero al ver el comportamiento de otras personas de otras partes del mundo, me parece que están en lo cierto.
En Argentina en (no me acuerdo que día) de Julio se celebra el "Día del amigo". Es un día donde la gente va y se reúne con sus amigos: van a comer, hacen juntadas en sus casas, etc.
Da igual de donde seas, los Americano promedio solo saben distinguir entre Mexicano y Español (Solamente por ser Europeos) pero despues, cualquier otro hispanohablante sera catalogado como Mexicano
Here in Argentina most of the asian inmigrants go to an asian school (chinese, korean, japanese) while they grow, only live inside of an asian neighborhood an go back to asia when they become adults, it's like they don't want to asimilate the local culture or be a part of it in the future
@@reaux3921 she’s argentinian. prob her grandparents are inmigrants but she’s born and raised here she us argentinian. nationality is not the same as race 🤥
Well I do believe the video is talking about Latinamerican countries! When you are in whatever country you may be in! What would be RUDE is to not follow the customs and traditions of said country! I've never been to Japan but, if I ever travel to Japan I know NOT to go around kissing people on the cheek but rather bow as is custom in Japan! If you are in a Latinoamerican country the custom is to kiss on the cheek!
It's a sign of appreciation and friendliness. Between men it depends the region, generally could be after introducing a friend's friend or on reunions after a while. I personally never liked to kiss men, it's weird. But with time one relax a bit and just do it if they start it. It in general, for Argentines, kiss is mostly to greet wormen or between women. Men just shake hands or nod each other while saying hi.
@@Argentvs Well in Argentina a kiss between men that are related is not weird at all, fathers and sons kiss each other on the cheek as well as brothers and cousin also do the same! It's part of the culture in Argentina and no one even thinks twice about it!
@@carlosdcardona5676 I know that, I am Argentine... But don't think is general..I find it more a porteño thing or big city folks. I have never greeted family with a kiss except my girl cousins or my aunts, grandmother. Men, hell no.
Yessss, feels weird to do only one kiss, I'm so used to double. Me pasó que la persona está acostumbrada a dar un sólo beso y entonces te dejan colgando jajajaj
I'm from San Juan, Argentina. Here we give two kisses. But in Mendoza, another province of Argentina that is south of San Juan, they give one kiss. For me that is like the Spanish girl says : I feel like something is missing when I only give one kiss. Interesting video by the way!
Spanish is probably the most intuitive language to learn and understand, that I've found so far. The pronunciations are especially much more natural than english or french. Commenting as a person who's fluent in 3 languages (including english) and is trying to learn a bit of french, spanish, and japanese.
Yeah for a English speaker Spanish easy to learn because so many words sound similar. Plus it sounds good and while they do have extra articles its not that bad. I too am learning Japanese how has you progress been ?
@@southcoastinventors6583 Japanese is "fun" I started for the heck of it since my daughter lives there & am quite amazed that she's so competent because for an English speak that language is crazy. 😁
I found it VERY easy to learn Castellano- but having been warned about Argentinian’s accent and then also having lived in BA - it was so easy for me to pick up what I was generally taught to be a bad accent to speak with. It’s just as irritating as Castilian Spanish with the “lithp “. And then you have the speed buggies from the Islands. Ughhhhhh. A million Miles per hour when they speak and they can barely finish saying words like ‘este lado ‘ becomes ‘este lao’. 😂
I doubt non Spanish speakers can understand "ay ahi hay" in a single sentence with the natural Spanish speed, like la gran mayoria de hablentes no nativos no pueden ni entender cuando hablas con velocidad normal
Todos dicen que es fácil el español y tal pero luego llegan a nuestros países y son incapaces de decir nada, ni el esfuerzo hacen, ni viviendo años en ellos. Curioso. Creo que lo más difícil es que conjuguen correctamente los verbos y no hablen poniendo tantos pronombres, no hablamos así. Supongo que entre los idiomas romances nos entendemos con mayor facilidad ya que tenemos una rama común.
Exacto el español para el hablante europeo o del mundo piensan que el dialecto españa es el mismo de argentina, mexico o colombia cuando van todo el español que aprendieron no les sirvio ya les paso a varias personas. Lo mismo pasa con el ingles de Usa e inglaterra, Australia (dicen que este es muy difícil) y sudafrica el dialecto de un idioma que lo utilizan en varios países es un problema.
Bueno, peores somos nosotros intentando hablar inglés. El Español es fácil de verdad, porque Alfonso X le pegó un repaso a la gramática creando un estándar que tuviese sentido y lógica. En la mayoría de otros idiomas nadie hizo nada parecido y son totalmente inconsistentes.
Porque? Soy de argentina. Ya explicaron que no son besos como tal, los cachetes (mejillas) se tocan pero nunca con los labios. Sería gay si fuera con los labios.
I adore these gals! I studied in México, lived in Colombia, and traveled through Spain. I dreamed of Argentina, but never made it. The banter you see here in this clip reminds me of the chats I had with my friends-- on food and on language. So friendly, so lovable. 😊
In Ireland I heard people saying they were taking French because they started learning Spanish and it was too easy. It surprised me because French and Spanish are kind of similar, though I agree that pronunciation in Spanish is A LOT easier. So I asked them to speak a little bit in Spanish... God, it was the ugliest most terrible thing I heard. No conjugation, terrible pronunciation... It seems many people have this idea Spanish is very easy, and sure, it is definitely not a very hard language to learn, but this idea Spain is "way easier" than, for examen, French, seems to be more of a stereotype. Or maybe Spanish teachers are way more lenient when it comes to evaluating language acquisition so the students get the wrong inpression they are doing oh so well when in fact they are doing terrible XD (I really think there might be soem true in this, the level of exigence in Spanish classes seems to be way lower than in the French ones). I think French has certain difficulties Spanish definitely has not, and the other way around. I would say French is harder because it is phonetically more complex while Spanish phonetics are quite easy, but I don't think they are so far apart in terms of difficulty as some people make it sound. Actually, the easiest thing in Spanish in comparison with French, which is the pronunciation, is just a no no for English speakers, they are terrible at it, so I really don't understand what they find so "much easier" about Spanish compared to French, when they are so incredibly bad at it, which is exactly what is really different in terms of difficulty, being Spanish much easier than French. I guess the negative structure of "ne ... pas" also throws you off at the begining, other than that... And agian, I do think French has sime difficulties Spanish does not have, but what truly makes this difference in difficulty bigger is the pronunciation, and English speakers (not Germans, nor French, nor Swedish people) are particularly BAD at it.
"Too easy", how insulting. I'd have to bite my tongue to not reply "You call that Spanish?" English speakers do have a hard time with Spanish pronuntiation. I find English to be an easy language to learn, yet pronuntiation is the hardest for me as well. I find there's barely any consistency between how a word is written and how a word is pronounced, which is not the case with Spanish.
Por que la colombiana piensa que los argentinos somos europeos 😭👍 desendemos de europeos pero tampoco es tan fuerte nuestra desendecia como para ser tal cual a ellos 😿👍
Porque World Friends es de Corea del Sur y está dirigido a gente de todo el mundo. Pero estoy de acuerdo, debería poner solo subtítulos en inglés y ya.
"If I want to talk to a lady I'll speak in French, If I want to talk to a soldier I'll speak German, If I want to be understood by stupid people, I'll speak English, If I want to speak to God I'll speak in Spanish". Se joden, tenemos el mejor idioma de todos.
LOS 2 BESOS EN EUROPA??😂😂😂EN FRANCIA!???????LOS DOS BESOS SE DAN EN ESPAÑA QUE PERTENECE A EUROPA (LATINA)ALGO MUY MUY IMPORTANTE,ESPAÑA NO SOLO PERTENECE A EUROPA,NO HAY QUE OLVIDARLO JAMÁS,ESPAÑA ES LATINA CÍEN POR CIEN
Doesn't really matter what others have to say. The truth of the matter is that Spanish is one of the most important languages to know, and for anyone planning to work in the US or for an American company, there is no better second language to have then Spanish
❤❤❤ Mexicano Beverly Hills Downey California. I speak Spanglish with friends and family and work and business English only. I can’t read or write spanish.😅😅
Actually what Andrea said about learning the articles along with the nouns makes a lot of sense. English language doesnt use articles that much (though I saw some only english speakers that think they do based on Slavic languages). In spanish is rare to find a sentence where the noun isn't with its article. The thing is we native Spanish speakers learned them both together: dame el lápiz (give me the pencil), siéntate en la mesa (sit down on the table), ¿te duele la cabeza? (does your head hurt?) so we in fact learned it all together, people learning Spanish as a foreigner language should do it too
English basically uses 3 articles - a/an (indefinite), the (definite) and zero article. There are a lot of rules for each when to use them and when not to, so it isn't easy, especially for languages which don't use articles.
Yeah, in Spanish we also have indefinites. Un/Uno/Una = a/an I just not tend to think of them as articles, I'm not even sure if they are considered as so in Spanish
Yeah when she said that I rolled my eyes, as did half the arabic, chinese, finish, hungarian, and japanese communities. Also, as a French speaker I agree. Spanish is pronounced as written. French is not. Eaux, eau, o, Au all sounf the same. Cent/sang/sens/sans also sound the same. etc
As an spanish native speaker i dont mind if someone does not use a correct verbal conjugation if i can understand the sentence but when it comes to articles and gender it really sounds weird if you dont say the correct one.. For example "The table is clean" would be "La mesa está limpia", femenine, but if you say "El mesa está limpia", changing the gender of the sustantive and keeping the verb in femenine, it sounds really really bad. Now, if you say "el mesa está limpio", keeping the verb´s gender and sustantive´s gender correctly it sounds like if "el mesa" is someone´s nickname who just took a shower and now he is clean lol but, at least, its gramatically correct. So yeah, the gender of the sustantives and the correct use of the article asociated are an important thing to learn in spanish and you should memorize as much as you can.
It depends... In Argentina, if you got to Corrientes or north of Santa Fe, it's two kisses. I Rosario or Buenos Aires, it's only one. When my relatives from Corrientes or Reconquista come to visit, I always forget one kiss 🤣.
Hahaha. But, being honest, it isn't that ackward in any case. Even with Spaniards can happen that some kiss and some don't, or in some situations you do or don't, so... we improvise everytime. It doesn't matter.
@@jal051 it always happens to me when I'm greeting my Italian family. I'm argentinian so I'm used to one kiss but they will always go for two but yeah bc it's family it's not that awkward
This videos are good, but they'd be better if the people that set the subtitles would actually know Spanish or at least English, bruh the captions are all over the place.
If you think spanish is difficult, try basque or japanese P.S: In my case, when kissing, I give 2 kisses in general and just 1 to closest friends (and hand shake if they're boys). I'm from north Spain
Por Dios... No puedo ver un vídeo de un argentino que no sabe de Argentina... Cómo dijo la chica colombiana, en algunas partes de Argentina se saludan con 2 (Dos) besos. Esa chica en representación de Argentina, debe haber vivido (exclusivamente) en Capital Federal ó sus alrededores.
What's the problem with kissing on the cheeck? Americans nowadays feel that weird but I remember when I was a kid and watching american movies people used to to the same. Probably with all the guns there, people are afraid, maybe.
Obviously for any other speakers of Latin languages, the Spanish language is easy to understand and study because between these languages there is a similarity of between 80% and 95%. The languages most similar to Spanish are Galician, Portuguese and Italian, all three with a similarity of between 90% and 98%. If we talk about non-Latin languages, everything changes.
In France and Southern Italy, men kiss as a form of greeting while in Spain only women kiss among each other (or man to woman, if they are close friends) but never man to man unless you are of a different orientation. 😆
that's false, as a norm, yes you don't kiss another guy or men when you meet them, but I'll do it with my 2 best friends, or my dad, uncles, cousins. And when man meets a woman always greet each other with 2 kisses, unless is a bussines meeting, in that case, shake hands is more appropiate. I could not imagine a world where I'm not able to kiss my dad! not anymore but as a kid even in the lips.
In Argentina, we kiss everyone. Kisses for everybody :). When I was working in Barcelona, I used to kiss all the guys in the morning, just to get them mad hahaha, cool people.
Andrea from Spain is the kind of personality I have. Whenever there's a bunch of people talking or discussing something, we mostly listen; whenever there are only 2 of us, I speak up 🤣
Her silence it is cause the other 3 countries are not the same culture despite they talk the same language…and a lot of things like kissing, is a european exported thing, not their own culture, so to be clear it would be disrespectful for them… I’m Spaniard and i Understood her behaviour like that. Y tu por el escudo supongo que también.
@@felipecordoba992 exactly, you can turn on the subtitles if you don't understand English. German and French guests also speak in English not in their native language, idk why you want to make an exception with Spanish. Again, the majority of viewers understand English not Spanish.
given that the subtitles are already there and that the four of them are from a spanish speaking country, why are they speaking in english? wouldn't it be much easier to just communicate in their native language?
4:52 yeah, actually the difficulty to learn a language depends on your mother tongue or the languages that you speak. I am not sure but this sounds like an opinion from only knowing Engish and Spanish, where English has no grammatical genders for nouns, although there are some exceptions -at least that I know- for instance when using adjectives like blond/blonde which change according to gender of the noun. Most European languages have genders regardless of the family (slavic, germanic, latin, etc.). German has 3: masculine, feminine and neutral. Spanish, Italian and Portuguese have 2 genders. Danish has 2: common and neutral, it used to have three but femenine and masculine merged into a single one “common” many years ago (i think circa 1300s). I digressed, so going back to what started this comment, difficulty is relative and it depends on the languages you can speak before learning Spanish and the different aspects that you can evaluate: pronounciation, reading/writing regularity, grammar, etc. Also -and this might only apply to European languages- if you speak 2 it might help you with the third. My bf is learning Spanish from English but he’s a native German speaker. When moving from Engish to Spanish seems weird or like it doesn’t make sense grammatically or in use, he tried to think of it in German, and it actually is the same way as in Spanish yet different to English.
Funny I saw this video after watching a couple of Pokemon Scarlet & Violet stuffs. Given that that particular Pokemon game draws quite a bit from Spain, I wonder if we could have some kind of video where actual Spaniards dissect the game for its Spain-inspired contents 🤣 (Then again, given how Pokemon fans can be so disturbingly quick in finding references by themselves, I think this request is redundant) 😅
TWO KISSES IN ARGENTINA. All i know is that in Buenos Aires it's only one, but in the northeast it's two. I'm not 100% sure on other parts of the country
To learn spanish it's more easy if you are french native or fluent you near just need learn the vocabulary (since french has gender article too for words). The hardest part is learning the vocabulary and pronunciation. But i think others who already have gender article will have it easy like a french speaker. For me english is quite easy to in terms of vocabulary to learn, problems are for grammar or word order in the sentence sometimes you tent to translate french to english like it's write in french without put the word in the english order. It's strange there is no gender specified for somes situation.