Genes? Not so much ... 😅 Many Brits technically have the same genes as a lot of the Germans. The Anglos and the Saxons (germanic tribes) came from regions that are part of the current Germany and became the Anglo-Saxons in England and south-eastern Scottland since the 5th century. The english people have germanic roots, if you'd like to phrase it that way. So... while they developed different country borders, a different language and some other cultural differences, they had common ancestors. Sorry for nerding out 😂
@@duwns-x3n sorry, i do not understand what you're trying to tell me 😬 Btw. while i wrote a lot, i just meant, that the differences are more in cultural or societal nature, like always. Genes are not the source of conflicts.
@@YoussefAhmed-bd8cr who knows 🤷♂️ I don't feel offended 😉, but I'd also not be surprised if there were actually people that think that problems that are societal in nature could be genetic instead .... you see a lot of weird and dumb shit on the internet nowadays 🥲
I feel for vedal. His ancestors moved from Germany to the UK. Mine did one worse... They went from the USA to Russia of all the places on the entire planet!
the thing about Europe is, we all share the same place for thousands of years and just hate each other for no reason 😂 try to count the wars of the last 2 thousand years
1:29 Muy bien is Spanish, not French..... unless you can also use it with identical Spanish pronunciation in French as well. I believe the Spanish & British do not get along but they are at least less adversarial than the French & British for some reason.
No in French we don't use "Muy bien". It translates to "Very well" in English and in French it would translate to "Très bien" ("très" pronounced like the word "trait" without the last "t" and the "bien" like saying "bee-yen" but the n is more nasal than in Spanish, a bit hard to explain, listening to it would be better).