It's a youtube video for people learning languages. This one is easy languages so they are speaking english so people could hear and learn that way. They have many languages on this channel it helped me learn Portuguese.
@@juniorlopezsergio2857 I also watched Easy German videos to help me learn German :). But it is also interesting to watch videos in your first language just to learn about what people have to say about the topic!
How nice is to talk with such an intelligent community of polyglots. I can speak 5 languages (English, portuguese, german, french, italian and I’m learning russian) nowadays and I feel more than comfortable to find very focused people on learning languages!
I dunno if this happens in other languages but, sometimes languages share roots so they both have many similarities, so you can intuit the words when you read them. For instance, Spanish people can understand a lot of Portuguese having no idea. This video was really interesting, keep on uploading videos like this.
@@PolishArkadas I appreciate u that u try to learn very difficult language.:) it is my native language but when i try to teach, i am even confused lol. Teşekkür ederim güzel yorumların için.
@@thereaderofbooks6383 rica ederim.Bazen Türkçe dil ile bir sorunum var ama ben merak etmiyorum çünkü her zaman internette sorabilirim.İlk Türkçe dersler benim için zordu ama zamanla yavaş yavaş Türk yazım ve konuşma anlıyordum.👍
I'm Puerto Rican, native Spanish speaker, bilingual in English, which I learned at an early age. I also speak Italian, which I studied for two and a half years. I found it very easy to learn due to its similarity to Spanish. I also speak French, which I studied for a year. I'm currently studying (Brazilian) Portuguese, which is very similar to Spanish. That makes it very easy to learn. I would like to learn Chinese (Mandarin, and Cantonese). That would be a real challenge!
Hi Nelly. Make sure to check out the Easy Italian and Easy Portuguese channels :). It seems like with Spanish and French it won't take you too long to learn Italian and Portuguese!
Native: Danish Fluent: Danish and English Speaking Danish, English, Norwegian (Bokmål), and German Understand: Danish, English, Norwegian (Bokmål), Swedish, and German Learning: Danish, English, Norwegian (Bokmål), Swedish, Finnish, Greek, and German Want to learn: Icelandic, faroese, and French How to say Hello Danish: Hej Swedish: Hej Faroese: Hej Norwegian: Hei Finnish: Hei Icelandic: Hæ English: Hello German: Hallo French: Bonjour Greek: Γεια
I speak English (Native) German and a bit of Swedish. (I'm also learning Spanish in school, but not very interrested in it, just for the credits). I can read the Cyrillic Alphabet and Hangul.
@@juliosalgado956 I am African so basically it was the third langauge I learned,swahili that is,begun with Afrikaans then English followed by swahili then french and spanish. Imo swahili is not that complicated since you write the way you speak it. Now the problem comes in when forming sentences,once you past that then its game over but will put in the same class as learning German.
I am surprised being in Canada that not more people wanted to learn French, the second official language of Canada. Oh well, the reasons cited by the interviewees for totally justified for why they wanted to learn other languages.
This is a good observation. Speaking from personal experience, many learners in Canada are motivated by economic reasons to learn French (to get a high-paying government job, for example), but as you mentioned, there are many other motivations for learning other languages. In Canada, heritage language learning is becoming increasingly popular.
I (A 15 year old European) speak Serbian (my native) which means that I also understand 50+% of languages like Bosnian, Chroatian and Russian... Im fluent in English and Im learning Japanese at the moment... I know some German as well...
Native to turkish and english, can understand norwegian (can speak as well but not that fluently) currently studying dutch and german. i like all germanic languages ! 😄
This is interesting even as an English speaker because she pronounces some words differently than how I do in the US. For example, I don't say multilingual how she does. She pronounced -gual as two syllables. I pronounce it as one, like "gwul."
@@rebeccaeasyenglish6385 hey, sorry for my really late anwser. You did ask me how do I learn all those languages and I did not reply that question. I have been basically expose myself to those languages, hearing a lot and reading. I do like hear podcast and I have friends that speak it. My goal is to be a polyglot.
Y’all out here knowing so many languages while I have English and my poor french skills (I have an understanding of French, better when written instead of orally but fail to respond back ;w;)
I speak French, Spanish, Russian, mandarin, Korean, Italian, and Catalan (to varying abilities), and I've also studied Uzbek, Bulgarian, Portuguese, and German 😀 I'd really like to learn Greek, Serbo Croatian, and Armenian!
Rebecca Easy English to be honest the best way for me to learn is in a classroom setting, the only languages I've learned well are the ones I've been able to continue taking classes in. English is my native language :)
I have the impression that whether Americans, Canadians or Australians speak foreign languages depends very much on how far their foreign roots date back. The monolingual people are mainly assimilated people that have had their family offsprings in the country for several generations. Bi- or multillingual people are, not surprisingly, rather people with a more recent migratory background.
I speak a little bit English, standard Indonesian, colloquial Indonesian, a little bit honorific Javanese, egalitarian Javanese, ghetto Javanese, and KL Malay.
I speak two languages, those being Portuguese and English. Also I understand Galician and Castillian. I’d like to learn either french, german, italian or latin. Or all of them, that would be great if I could.
Im from Malaysia.. Malay, English & chinese are important in Malaysia for education & work.. I really love to learn languages. Finally in 3years, i can speak German, spanish, French, Korea, Catalan, Portuguese, little bit Turkish, swissgerman & thai. honestly, asian languages are much harder😢 than european languages.....
It's interesting, isn't it? I live in Royal Leamington Spa, a town in the Midlands of England. Just in this small area, we have peoples from the Asian continent, , Poles and other Eastern Europeans, and Portuguese. They all speak English well, and all work. I love this sort of 'melting pot' - quite a bit of it historical - but I'm also aware that many white British disapprove (sometimes strongly) of this influx. P.S. I wouldn't be surprised if I got hostile remarks due to this comment! Robert, UK.
@@2eleven48 Yeah, as someone who learns Japanese and Polish, I have immense respect for people who come to this country alone and speak such fantastic English. It is a shame that some British people (arguably including our own Home Secretary, whose parents were themselves, immigrants) are so averse to it. I could understand if there's a massive influx, that overwhelms public services and the job market, but I see no issue with immigration and the subsequent diversity that comes with it, and as someone who is a language fanatic, kind of enjoy it!
Is it easy to talk with strangers in the street, in Canada ? And do you have to say something like "Sorry to bother you" to engage a conversation not to seem rude ? I plan to go in Canada in some years so i'm curious about how to be there !
Thanks for your comment! Good question. It depends on where you are in Canada - I would say people living in bigger cities are less likely to stop and talk if it looks like you are trying to sell or advertise something, but if you are asking for help or you have a question, most people will take the time to talk to you. And yes, it is best to say something like "sorry" or "excuse me" before asking your question.
@@rebeccaeasyenglish6385 Oh ok it's interesting to know, on this point Canada seems closer to Europe than USA. Of what i've seen in USA you can approach someone like "Hey, What's up ?" so i was wondering if it were the same in Canada. Thanks you for your answer ;)
Very interesting place and people. I learnt 4 languages during my adolescence (English, German, French and Portuguese, being my mother tongue Spanish) and they were not a hard task for me until the age of 23 (I got a C1 certificate in 3 of them and I've worked in all of them). However after that I've tried Swedish and a native South American language and damn, they turned out to be much more challenging now, even though Swedish is not grammatically more complex than German. I don't know if it's the age or the little time and mind I have to dedicate to them, but it was frustrating 😭
I know I'm like 8 months late, but here is the link of Ted talk Lydia Machova about learning languages. I recommend that you watch it, and hopefully it will help you :) ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-o_XVt5rdpFY.html
@@SimplyStreetEnglish My native language Polish.I speak English and Turkish.I still study Turkish ,I want achieve B2 level.👍.I also wonder why not learn Arabic
@@SimplyStreetEnglish I studied Arabic for 2 days by by 5 hours.Language is not easy .The hardest thing is grammar and pronunciation.To learn this language at least A2 level you need a lot of time.For me Level A1 will be satisfactorily.I studied German language in middle school for 3 years nevertheless I forgot everything 😄.Maybe in the future I will learn again .
Good video, but not enough participants to show all the diversity of languages that we have in Canada.. That would take an hour of interviews, lol There are probably more than 200 languages and ethnicities in Canada.. I am Canadian, but originally European, i am a polyglote, I speak English, French, Russian, Spanish and Hebrew.. Some of those fluently and some partially, but i studied them all Wishing the best to all of you!
Thanks for your comment, Joan. You're right, we could spend weeks asking people in Canada what languages they speak! Thanks for sharing yours - how did you learn them all? :)
@@rebeccaeasyenglish6385 Rebecca, thank you so much for your reply, I appreciate it! I learnt my languages at different times, some during higher education, and some by myself using immersion method. I wish you success with what you are doing for the Easy Languages channel, you guys are one of the best channels for lang. learning on RU-vid.. 😁👍
I wish I was fluent in Dutch :/ Sadly I only know hello in Dutch :/ For ppl who are curious you say hello in ditch like this “hallo” That is also how you say hello in German And it’s the same pronunciation!
I want to study Japanese, Korean, Chinese, Spanish, Italian, German, Russian, Thai and be more knowledgeable about my own language Tagalog (Philippine language) haha since I was raised speaking Both English and Tagalog (mixed; Taglish)
Ich spreche Indonesisch als meine muttersprache, außer englisch, ich spreche deutsch, malaysich und wenig französich... I speak Indonesian as my mother language, besides english, i speak german, malay and a bit french ...
Is there not a demographic for "Easy English". All other "Easy Language" videos have English subtitles with the language they're learning. Is there not a language you can have subtitles for for "Easy English"? Maybe Spanish?
I was taught French starting in elementary, but I quit in high school because some teachers would teach Parisian French while others would teach québécois. It got really confusing so I gave up. I’m out of high school now, and I’m trying to learn French on my own terms now😊🇫🇷
What a beautiful sunny day! I wish I could live in your neighborhood! In the industrial city where I live, we have always the most severe air pollution and dark skies without any rain!