What your language is similar to which language?

What your language is similar to which language?

>Korean
>Nothing

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youtube.com/watch?v=k-gTUUgZCQo
youtube.com/watch?v=tXKI7g-Ff-w
youtube.com/watch?v=fQCmBGrx1UQ
ethnologue.com/language/jje
twitter.com/NSFWRedditVideo

I don't like this game.

Dutch

English
Spanish
Italian
Portuguese

Honestly I have no idea if French is closer to Spanish or Italian... I think it's Italian. Otherwise it could be a meme language like creole or catalan.

Danish, norwegian

Galician, Spanish, Catalan, French, Italian, Romanian, in that order.

Definitely Italian. You can tell by the way they verb stuff, it's a bit different from the Western/Iberian romances.

Except for some reason, Portuguese/French kept the Celtic influence on our accents, whereas Spanish/Italian kept the roman one. It's weird that it alternates geographically.

>Finnish
>Estonian

I think something remotely same with Russian too. And Swedish.

Hungarian as well, no?

And of course some Saami languages

Russian
I don't know, some turkic one, I guess.

Yes I forgot

our language is related in some way related but i don't see alot of similarities.

>Romance
sounds more gorgeous than germaninc

>German
>Swiss German

Eeeee, bilät, urus, pıravıdu gavarış

...

Finns are easy to learn Hungarian? As Germans learn Norwegian, e.g.

>remotely same with Russian too. And Swedish.
Stupid dumb vocational school scum

Matese, italian and french desu

I guess Italian is the most similar "popular" language to Spanish.

It's like 80% the same vocabulary.

Afrikaans is Dutch, although they deny it.
German resembles Dutch.
English is very old Dutch. Words aren't used in the same way and the word order is different.

French, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, etc etc etc.

This.

And to be honest, Basque is unintelligible with all languages.

The problem with Portuguese from the Spanish perspective is hearing it. Reading it is piss easy.

Also to some extent German and English

fok julle naaiers

we know, we're upset that they didnt fully convert us

SEI COME UN FOGLIO DI CARTA VETRATA

portuguese

Guess

wrong thread

Czech.

I understand Slovak most

Occitan
Haitian Creole

supposedly Frisian languages

Silesian
>whats Scots

>whats Scots
Butthurt working class Scottish people speaking bad English

Frisian

Romance master race

The phonologic situation of Spanish among the rest of the Romance languages is very particular. Just to point out an example, Spanish has five plain vowel sounds. Whereas: French and Portuguese have nasal vowels; the aforementioned, Catalan and Italian have vowel height difference; and French, Portuguese, Catalan and Romanian have neutral vowels.

this

>You can tell by the way they verb stuff
I wasn't answering the French guy btw, Im French myself I was answering the OP

Stop lying, Kimmy. Your language Belongs to Altaic group, you are literally Buryats and Tuvans who traveled to the East coast.

Same from our perspective

Vowels are the best sounds

Scots isn't a language

>fucking t*rkmen

What the fuck am I gonna do with this?

Throw arrows on horseback

turkish unironically sounds similar to japanese

Spanish and French

For the last time its SWEDISH!!!

Very simple. Spain and Italy closer to roman empire centre (Mediterranean), Frence and Portugal on the outskirts i.e more celts
*I believe.

Dutch in terms of grammar and syntax.

French in terms of vocabulary.

Portuenses y Italiano.

Scots, Frisian & Afrikaans

Apparently to people with no knowledge at all of English, the language sounds most like Swedish or Norwegian, so I'd say that.

Good guess

I guess I'd say Dutch and German followed by Norweigan. Given the context I could maybe decipher half of what was being said but it'd still be a crapshoot. English is a cum dumpster fo languages mixed together

2bh I have a much easier time at reading French (and even Italian and Spanish) than I do at reading German or Dutch

American English is pretty close, very few differences

Yeah I'd say its almost an equal footing at understanding romance and germanic

French is closer to Italian as the other user said, but Italian and Spanish are closer to eachother than they are to French.

>Scots is the Germanic LANGUAGE variety spoken in Lowland Scotland and parts of Ulster

c
and then see

The root of all evil is the catholic church. We must wipe the corrupt, world controlling vatican and its subjects out. The Protestant reformation was the best thing that could have happened to us, for the first time people could read the bible and think for themselves instead of listening to the evil, deceiving catholic. We must make sure that no matter what happens, the eternal catholic must be contained, or else the same faith that happened to our orthodox brothers will happen to us.

Estonia and Hungarian very similiar.

We have some same words than Russian and Swedish.

Japanese sounds quite similiar and lot's of same words.

Serbo-Croatian
Slovak
Czech
Bulgarian
Austrian German, but increasingly less so

Frisian is the closest language to English.

Talk to some Azeri or or Turkmen

you mean japanese right

From old french which is a very shifted vulgan latin plus some middle german load words, dead language
Then occitan and catalan
Then swiss romanche
Then maybe an italian dialect I don't know
Then Modern italian
But desu even old french is gibberish as are the other languages mentioned

>Old French is gibberish

I can perfectly understand video related

youtube.com/watch?v=k-gTUUgZCQo

It is just the accent who is a bit funny

>English
>Dutch apparently, but they don't have your glorious French loanwords.

Polack here.

Czech and Slovak are the closest, then Ukrainian and Belarusian are fairly easy to understand too. Russian comes after those and is more distant but I can pick up the general gist if it's spoken slowly.

All Romance languages, English.

That's pretty much it. Some parts of even non-Indo-European languages sound kinda similar, but that's just coincidences. Like our "é" that sounds similar to how the Japanese pronounce their e, for example.

Chechen. According to this map to other Caucasian languages, but thats not true. We are probably related to nothing (besides Ingushetians (we are basically the same) and other Subnations).

See

Japanese doesn't sound like other Asian languages to me. I'm not sure why. To me it sounds clearer, sharper, more structured, or at least structured more similarly to languages I'm familiar with.

t.weeb

this though i agree that japanese is the only one where i can actually distinguish what they're saying

chinese really DOES sound like CHING CHONG PING PONG

Ukrainian
Russian
Polish

You're right, it's entirely possible that it just sounds that way to me because I'm way more used to hearing Japanese.

Japanese is definitely more structured and spoken with sharper intonations than French and most other romance languages besides maybe Italian. Honestly even Korean intonation is sharper than French.

I can't think of any indo-european languages that sound anything remotely similar to Japanese, even though I am often reading of it's apparent familiarity to the European ear. Japanese phonology is much closer to Austronesian Languages than any Indo-European one. It should sound foreign to the European ear.

It seems to me that many European posters are projecting their subconscious desire to be more Japanese. That is my hypothesis.

French is strangely closly related to romanian. A gypsy posted in romanian one time and every french-english speakers had a somewhat clear idea of what he was sayng.

i thought korea and japan have similar sino vocabs.

Thats because all the sounds are literally a consonant plus a vowel. You'd have to be a retard to not able to distinguish the sounds

i like how jap talk like naruto.

…………

>Korean
>altaic group
Lmao

What, still hoping Europe won't notice the Arabic snake in its kitchen? :D

Afrikaans and Scots (if you consider that a separate language and not a dialect).

Urdu
Marathi
Punjabi
Nepali

Hindi speaker btw

>Vietnamese
>Muong, and some other Vietic languages

You could see the similar in their names alone, Vietnamese is "tiếng Việt", and Muong's name in Muong is "thiểng Mường".

come home turanid man

This has a normal r why did the French fuck it up with the retarded guttural r?

basque
nothing

Is the number of speakers increasing? How much do you use it in every life?

>Korean
What about Jeju language?
youtube.com/watch?v=tXKI7g-Ff-w
youtube.com/watch?v=fQCmBGrx1UQ
ethnologue.com/language/jje

It's just a dialect of korean