Rank Hardest Language Around The World ㅣ Finland, Brazil, Germany, Thailand, UK, Korea ㅣ FT. 8TURN

Published 2024-06-22
Awesome World is a Channel made to connect different culture around the World!
How Awesome is That!

All Comments (21)
  • Haha our Finnish pride Robin, missed the chance to tell them the iconic finnish sentence. ”Kokko, kokoo koko kokko kokoon. Koko kokkoko? Koko kokko.” Translated it would be.. ”Kokko (a last name in finland), put together the whole bonfire. The whole bonfire? The whole bonfire. Also the fact that the word ”kuusi” can mean ”a Spruce” the ”number six” or ”your moon”. The sentence, ”Kuusi palaa” would mean ”Six pieces.” ”Your spruce is on fire.” ”The spruce returns” ”your moon is on fire” ”Your moon returns” ”Number six returns” ”Number six is on fire” ”Six of them returns” ”Six of them are on fire” Also had to laugh at the ”das auto” coming from Robin. I thought the same thing at the same moment.😂
  • @Leo-pd4fc
    Siellä on meidän Suomen Turun oma poika Suomen LEGENDAARISIMPIA Artisteja Robin Packalen Suomi mainittu Torilla tavataan perkele hyvää Keski-kesää ja aurinkoista Juhannusta kaikille teille ihanille ihmisille! There's our very own Turku's boy the most LEGENDARY Finnish Artist of all time Robin Packalen Finland mentioned at the market square hell yeah happy Mid-Summer Celebrations every lovely people! ☀️🏞😎🇫🇮
  • @lumiukko4296
    Kinda pained me to see that Robin didn't know much about Finnish language structure. It's common misconception to think Finnish grammar makes no sense when it actually does. It is complicated but it has rules. Would be more interesting if actual linguists would compare the languages.
  • @softesthedgehog
    French girl probably confused Finnsh with Slavic languages, because Finnish is actually pretty vowel heavy
  • Ratings (English speaker) 1.Finnish -Complex grammar with 15 cases, agglutinative structure, and vocabulary that is very different from most other languages. 2.Thai -Tonal language with five tones, unique script, and complex grammar. 3.Korean -Unique writing system, complex grammar, levels of politeness, and vocabulary. 4.German -German is more complex than French due to its grammar, including cases and gendered nouns, but it shares some vocabulary with English, making it easier than some other languages. 5.Portuguese - Portuguese grammar and pronunciation are somewhat more challenging than French but still manageable. Shared Latin roots help with vocabulary. Gendered nouns, verb conjugations, and pronunciation can be challenging. 6. French -Gendered nouns and pronunciation can be difficult, but it has relatively regular grammar and shared vocabulary with many other languages. 7.English English has irregular spelling, complex pronunciation rules, and numerous idiomatic expressions which can be challenging for complete beginners.
  • @alicemelon_
    When I was a bit younger, almost every girl close to my age was a big fan of Robin. After these years it's so cool to see how he's still doing so well and even making content with one of my favourite kpop groups, 8Turn!! I really loved watching this <3
  • @SK-nw4ig
    Few points Robin could have used to justify his case to make Finnish seem the easiest: Phonetic language, everything is always pronounced the same way it is written, one does not have to guess; emphasis always on the first syllable; order of the words is rather irrelevant, people will understand you anyway; and as he mentioned, no gender, but also no articles in the language.
  • @Sayitlikitiz101
    French girl was working overtime to make sure French didn't get the title of hardest language. 😂
  • @montse93
    Robin Packalen! The only Finnish singer that I know and listen to, what a coincidence😮😅❤
  • @afjo972
    That depends on your native language. It’s ridiculous to say French is the hardest language because for Romance-speakers French will be very easier. And on the other hand, Germanic-speakers (apart from English) won’t struggle learning German… I don’t know about Thai, though …
  • Please, if any participant reads this, if Robin ever says he/she is "it", ("se") in Finnish, please correct him by saying it is when you speak informally among friends, but Formal is "Hän", which is both he and she. We don't speak to people generally, as though they are things.
  • @teza2922
    As a European I think Thai is the most difficult of them all.
  • @T.K.T
    I don't understand, Finnish is not a consonant heavy language, and we have few consonant clusters
  • @Mi-my7pw
    😂😂😂amei. O homem da Finlândia é muito de boa. Ele é tipo: deixa a vida me levar🌴🦥 E o cara do UK como sempre sendo um comédia. Todos foram fofos de verdade ❤
  • @watashiyo8523
    Well, Ana should have said that Brazilian Portuguese is closer to the 'pure form,' as Portuguese spoken in Portugal has changed over time, while Brazilian Portuguese has preserved some sounds and writing conventions. So...
  • @Stratos.2
    The Korean guy is confusing the Korean alphabet with the language. They're two different things. The language wasn't created to be easy by the king, just the alphabet was. The language is way older and how easy the alphabet is to learn has nothing to do with how easy the language is to learn.
  • @Aurinkohelmi
    Robin didn't know what Finnish is related. It's finno ugric language, other languages in same family Estonian, hungarian and some minor languages in Russia.
  • @Xarmutinha
    17:06 as a greek learning finnish i agree.... Finnish phonetics except ö\y\ä are almost identical to greek.... Icelandic as well and even more.... To me Finnish when i started (and even now lots of times😢😅😂) sounds like greek gibberish, for examle: "lentokonesuihkuturbiinimoottoriapumekaanikkoaliupseerioppilas" would be pronounced the exact same way as "λέν'τοκονεσουιχκουτουρμπιινιμοοττοριαπουμεκαανικκοαλιουψεεριοππιλας" (the apostrophe is needed) For me the ranking would be: 1. Thai/korean 2. German 3. Finnish 4. French 5. Portuguese 6. Engl