Ruining WW2 with Bad Translations - StarvHarv Reaction
See the original video here - • Ruining World War II w...
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13:05 I definitely meant to say St. Paul's there. I've been to St Paul's. Not sure why I said St Peters (which in London would be Westminster Abbey)
@emilee507
10 ай бұрын
I love your reaction videos, I just watched another video called "THE LARGEST ancient battles in history" by Top Fives and would love to see your reaction towards that video.
@JBcountryball
10 ай бұрын
Hey that guy has another video on the cold war that is more funny somehow HE also returns in the cold war
@JBcountryball
9 ай бұрын
He made another video about WW1
@nobleconsejera5278
9 ай бұрын
I forgive you because thanks to you, we finally know who He is
@ITriggerWokeSJWS
9 ай бұрын
I think 14:00 was a Helen of Troy joke lol
I hope we never forget HE’s actions during the war, HE’s bravery and valor arguably won the entire thing.
@SheIsntHerALT
10 ай бұрын
he approved this comment
@JBcountryball
10 ай бұрын
HE committed warcrimes in Argentina from 1977-1983 Also he is the youngest son of the communist revolution
@catodes1295
10 ай бұрын
@@JBcountryballAnd HE is Spanish
@JBcountryball
10 ай бұрын
@@catodes1295 yes HE is spanish
@JBcountryball
10 ай бұрын
@catodes1295 I like HE hope HE returns so we can see more cool HE adventures. I'm not an AI it's supposed to be funny
I don't care how non-historical it is, I FULLY believe there was a buff shadowy figure named He who was wreaking havoc all over the world during the war.
@PresidentFunnyValentine
10 ай бұрын
He's Him.
@anadaere6861
10 ай бұрын
@@PresidentFunnyValentine He's Him
@patriot17764th
10 ай бұрын
There must of been.
@zephyr8072
9 ай бұрын
He is the true hero of WW2. And WW1.
@identity7536
9 ай бұрын
He‘s him.
The mentions of "He" are easily the funniest parts of this. How have I gone so long without ever hearing of him and his accomplishments?!
@danielbishop1863
9 ай бұрын
I happen to have a co-worker the last name of "He". I think that He would appreciate all this praise.
@ririlub
5 ай бұрын
There's also a youtuber couple with a guy named Mr. He
@_.-ADAM-SLE3PER_II
5 ай бұрын
I swear whenever “He” shows up, it's hilarious.
Teacher: dont use Wikipedia My essay after using Wikipedia:
@Krafanio
10 ай бұрын
😂
@_.-ADAM-SLE3PER_II
5 ай бұрын
I hate to say that I find this quite relatable.
@user-sk2rv2no4i
4 ай бұрын
Happen to me
20:09 Okay this one I can take a guess at. "Al-Qaeda" means "the base" in Arabic, so if he translated into and back from Arabic, it could just mean there was a military base here (probably British) that could have been attacked.
@RogerLackman
10 ай бұрын
Oh! That actually makes a lot of sense.
@techpriestsalok8119
9 ай бұрын
Unless wikipedias timeline has changed significantly the actual phrase is “Malta is supplied via Operation Pedestal.” So I guess pedestal->support->some intermediate-> the base->Al-Qaeda
@AmirSatt
9 ай бұрын
based?
StarvHarv has a great concept going. Lots of fun!
@CupOfTeaIndieCharts.
9 ай бұрын
Yes
tsuma means wife in Japanese and Suomi means Finland in Finnish. "Finland" got turned into somebody's wife
@carlosmpsenyorcapitacollon6977
9 ай бұрын
Of both Russia and the West.😂
@Jaggaraz218
9 ай бұрын
No, it was the battle of "Summa", which is a location in Finland. Also Suomussalmi doesn't even have any salami in it.
I can't believe we are not having a holiday after Shinzo Abe for granting us independence as a continent... Truly one of the most overlooked things in history.
@L_back
3 ай бұрын
I agree. I can see now why Poland and Japan maintained relatively friendly relations over the course of the war
Another History KZreadr gets exposed to the Chronicles of Him!
@bendi3768
10 ай бұрын
He invades Belgium
@KidneyFailureGaming
10 ай бұрын
And then God said, "Let there be Him". Amen 🙏
@MikeCera1
10 ай бұрын
HE is responsible for many crimes against humanity
@nickgiz377
10 ай бұрын
He is him
@tokutexascosplay5066
10 ай бұрын
He flew several hundred miles without a plane
I had to pause a few times, my ribs are hurting, my jaw hurts, and I'm crying from laughing so much. May HE rein his country forever! Funniest video you have done yet :D
@e1123581321345589144
10 ай бұрын
only a few times? video is 39 minutes, took me over an hour to watch :)))
Finnish, Hungarian, and Estonian are all part of the Finno-Ugric language family (along with other smaller languages scattered around Russia). They're some of the few non-indo-european languages in Europe.
@rasmusn.e.m1064
10 ай бұрын
Don't forget Saami ;)
@corneliali7747
10 ай бұрын
how did they came to be?
@NefariousKoel
10 ай бұрын
@@corneliali7747- The root language originated from pre-historic Asian tribes IIRC. Back when semi-nomadic tribal migration, and associated conflict, was a regular occurrence.
@corneliali7747
10 ай бұрын
@@NefariousKoel that's really cool! Do they have any other family members in the language group currently?
@danielbishop1863
9 ай бұрын
Other non-Indo-European languages in Europe are Maltese (Semitic) and Basque (unknown origin). And Turkish, if you can count it as "in Europe".
Just so you know Chris, the "He" that they mention so much is... professional History KZreadr, Sam Nixon
@user-cr2bt3zp1f
10 ай бұрын
He’s my go-to guy for the history of India
@warbacca1017
10 ай бұрын
You sure? It could be a sibling of Him from the Powerpuff girls
@TheTechnicalArea19
10 ай бұрын
His new video on Gupta history is the best!
Of course Chris recognizes the Antietam battlefield on sight.
@robertjarman3703
10 ай бұрын
You set him in Petersburg and he would trace out the trench lines by instinct.
He is truly an underrated figure from history, we really need to talk about him more.
I believe that the Hungarian and Finnish Languages are both related because they are both Uralic, because the Hungarians and Finnish migrated from the Ural Mountains to their respective locations. Great video Chris!
@jassen1924
10 ай бұрын
are they both theoritically mongolian(idk my sens of humor is so broken
@parkerjelke8786
10 ай бұрын
They aren’t Mongolian this was discredited years ago @@jassen1924
@parkerjelke8786
10 ай бұрын
The Hungarians however lived in the Ukrainian steppe before moving to the carpathian basin which is why they are confused for mongols I think
@parkerjelke8786
10 ай бұрын
They moved from the urals to the steppes of Ukraine and then pushed the bulgars out of modern day Hungary
@luisf2793
9 ай бұрын
Also Estonia is part of the finish language family
Not gonna lie, this is the hardest I've laughed in a while (not helped by the fact that I had to hold it in so my co-workers wouldn't hear. XD) May HIS great contribution to the Allied victory never be forgotten!
Ronaldo's role in WW2 is something to never be forgotten!
I recommend checking out “Why American Soldiers Where So Easy To Fight With” by The Front. It explains the Australian and American battle and how the soldiers connected with one another on every side! Great video
I was hoping you would react to this!! This video us hilarious!! Please do Ruining The Cold War With Bad Translations next.
@historytoremember
10 ай бұрын
Yeah it is great too and continues the world of He
@thespectre5403
10 ай бұрын
HE did some crazy stuff
@americanhistorybuff3385
10 ай бұрын
Same
@nyight333
10 ай бұрын
We need this.
20:09 Okay this one I can take a guess at. "Al-Q@eda" means "the base" in Arabic, so if he translated into and back from Arabic, it could just mean there was a military base here (probably British) that could have been attacked.
Thanks for giving me a good laugh! Are you HE? Edit: make sure to check out the Cold War version as well, that one covers FDR's death.
@VloggingThroughHistory
10 ай бұрын
shhhhhhh
@L_back
3 ай бұрын
@@VloggingThroughHistorynaah VTH is hiding something Oh wait, wasn’t supposed to say this
8:08 Yes you're right, VTH. Suma or Tsuma means wife in Japanese
@LC-sc3en
10 ай бұрын
Indeed!
@L_back
3 ай бұрын
The Soviet army captured a Japanse wife… in Finland
Man I spent way too much time crying from laughing too much. This was great and maybe you'll do some more of them.
7:28 Sorry if this is nitpicky and I might just be misunderstanding you but Finland is not a Scandinavian country, it’s a nordic country. While many tend to use these terms interchangeably, Scandinavia consists of only Sweden, Norway and Denmark, while the Nordic countries are the three Scandinavian countries along with Iceland and Finland. Also, Finnish and Estonian are very similar and I struggle to tell them apart. But apart from Estonian, Finnish is indeed a very unique language.
@oobee123
10 ай бұрын
Having Finnish as my first language and having lived in Estonia for 3 years I can say that our languages are about 40% mutually intelligible at best. I can see why the languages can seem very similar to a non-speaker though.
17:12 I can't help but imagine a country doing this and an international conference leads to a bunch of world leaders saying, "They broke diplomatic relations with us." followed by several sassy, "You sure about that, bud?"
Wonderful stuff! Have you ever laughed so much the snot began to dribble from your nose?! I just couldn't help myself. Just wonderful.
17:50 "The sun is stronger at night" could be a reference to Japanese night-fighting being superior to the allies early in the war?
Oh man this was the funniest video I have seen in a minute. Please, make more of these.
Great video and comparison to the real timeline. I recommend his WW1 video to go along with this one.
That Brisbane riot is an interesting subject, as far as I remember it was because Brisbane’s population had grown by a massive amount due to the American soldiers there and because American soldiers were paid far more than Australian soldiers they were favored in bars and other places, and then eventually an American MP tries to arrest an drunk American soldier, but Australian troops help the drunkard soldier because American MPs were hated by Australians too, and that somehow evolves into a citywide fight This is just what I remember and some of the details are vague but it’s an interesting topic for a video of you find more about it
@SquadPoop
10 ай бұрын
I wonder if Race had any part in the riot? Because I remember that a couple months before there was another riot that stemmed from Black soldiers not being segregated (since Australia didn't have segregation laws) which upset white American troops, leading to fights breaking out.
@astartesteadious3756
10 ай бұрын
@@SquadPoopwhile the battle of Brisbane didn’t have anything directly got to do with race (tensions were increased at the time of how white American soldiers separated African American soldiers, which Australians didn’t look kindly on), there were fights in England, Australia and New Zealand when people refused to segregate whites and non-whites. The New Zealand one (Battle of Manners street) happened when American soldiers were refusing Māori soldiers entrance into a club (that they had already been using) and fighting broke out when American troops used belts to attack Māori soldiers. In the UK (Battle of Bamber Bridge) happened under similar circumstances when American mps tried arresting African American soldiers for not having permission or wearing correct attire at a local pub.
@Mrkleanupguys2
10 ай бұрын
And American Soldiers were trying to get Australian girls and 2nd AIF wasn’t having that, it’s was around the time when Australian soldiers were returning home from North Africa (Tobruk) Syria and Iraq
@orwellboy1958
10 ай бұрын
@@SquadPoop this also happened in the UK, all be it on a smaller scale. Black troops drinking in a pub, MPs told the pub owner blacks and whites couldn't drink together so the next day the landlord put out a sing that said black troops only, MPs turned up to arrest a black service man on a trumped up charge, and were attacked by locals. I'm missing a lot out but I've seen several KZread channel's covering it.
@gidi3250
10 ай бұрын
@@astartesteadious3756kinda the opposite of what happened to South Africa, our men black and white mixed and returned calling eachother brothers, and when the government made the 1948 laws that is now known as apartheid these ww2 veterans created the torch kommando, and declared they would fight for total equity between all races, just like they had at the front during ww2.
I absolutely agree we don't talk about the Siege of Leningrad enough. I've read several diaries, journals, and memoires written by blokadniki (people who lived through the siege) and many of them reveal both humanity at its absolute best and its most horrific worst. I've visited several sites associated with the siege in St. Petersburg and some of them are absolutely heartbreaking, especially the "Flower of Life" memorial dedicated to the children who died during the siege. The establishment of the Доро́га жи́зни (the Road of Life) in the first winter of the siege is also an astonishing feat of ingenuity and logistics that deserves a lot more attention than it gets. I also have to tip my hat to the Finns, who had plenty of reasons to want to give the Soviets some payback and were supposed to assist the Germans in sieging Leningrad. Despite that, they refused to do more than guard their own border. Yes, they did effectively block the northern access to Leningrad by virtue of just guarding their borders, but they did not directly invade or bomb the city, nor did they make any strong efforts to block the flow of critical supplies into the city even when the opportunities presented themselves. Things could have gone much, much worse for the Leningraders if the Finns hadn't restrained themselves.
@gengarzilla1685
9 ай бұрын
In the end, Finland's goal was largely just to reverse the Winter War border adjustments. There were of course agitators within the Finnish political scene who desired a "Greater Finland" carved out from lands beyond the prewar border but they were only ever a sidelined minority unlike their government supported counterparts in the likes of Hungary and Romania. And really, between the USSR getting supported by the western Allies after the European Axis invasion and Japan upholding the Soviet-Japanese Nonaggression Pact, Finland had been left with no other realistic choice as far as great power alliances went. Germany had sadly become the one last big sympathetic ear now that Britain and friends had taken the Soviet side.
I'm so glad you actually pulled up the Wikipedia article to show what was actually translated. My favourite mistranslation was the Luxembourg one in 10:02 😂
Bro knew that was the Antietam battlefield! I'm very impressed, NERD!!!
Love your reactions chris!🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
23:28 it looks like it was a combination of things that exploded here. The US soldiers were paid far better than the Australian ones, the US soldiers were often treated better by local (Australian) shopkeepers and merchants, and... Douglas MacArthur. He had degraded the Australian leadership multiple times, and often completely ignored the Australian forces in his reports. There were some brawls earlier that week, including a gunfight that killed an American soldier. The battle itself started when a drunk American was arrested by an American MP for not having a leave pass. The Australians attacked him, both sides called for backup, and the situation exploded.
Only in Russia is winter a choice😂I saw HE was wearing army pants and flip-flops, so I bought army pants and flip-flops.
What a great video, we need more reactions to this channel
HE is clearly one of the unsung heros of WW2
@Iona-th1jp
5 ай бұрын
HE really is.
He is such an overlooked historical figure from WWII
Well the father of footballers Gary and Peter Neville was also called Neville, so his name was Neville Neville
@TheSkyGuy77
10 ай бұрын
Neville squared
@histostuff
10 ай бұрын
and he was buried in a town called Bury!
@Y0ur_M0th3r
10 ай бұрын
There is no way- you have to be kidding
@papamurrth1
10 ай бұрын
Can confirm this is absolutely true!
@Sim0n98
10 ай бұрын
Phil Neville, not Peter Neville
Hey Chris, thank you for doing a video of something more humorous. I'm going through a really rough patch in my life right now. my fiancé passed away Sunday morning after her body rejected a lung transplant. you video made me laugh when i've been doing nothing but crying the past day. thank you.
@VloggingThroughHistory
10 ай бұрын
Oh no. I’m so sorry to hear this. Glad to bring a little joy into a really terrible time for you.
@PNut8421
10 ай бұрын
@@VloggingThroughHistory Thank you Chris. that does mean a lot coming from you. She was such an important part of my life. I know it'll be a long time for me to be able to move on; i need to take things one day at a time.
Yay my recommendation 🎉🎉 thank you sir!
Have fun in Salzburg! I went last April and it was a really enjoyable experience
24:51 Ghenghis Khan would probably be proud.
It’s crazy cause not to long ago like this week I watched this video and here you are reacting to it 👌🏻👍🏻 even better
YES! Been waiting for this ^^
“Who is he?” “He’s..” “ *HIM* “
7:33 Finnish is also related to Estonian and Saami. The other languages in the family are found around the Ural mountains.
That was a lot of fun. Thanks Chris!
I was hoping you'd react to this! StarvHarv also has done this same thing but with general history and also the Cold War
3:35 On the topic of namealikes, there was one Donald Regan the Treasury Secretary then Chief of Staff in the Ronald Reagan administration. He, of course, was a huge proponent of Reaganomics.
13:31 Maybe its referring to the ''Stab'' which can be translated into both shaft, stick and probably a few other things and was also a name for the german military.
If you're going to Salzburg, I hope you have the opportunity to eat dinner at St. Peter Stiftskulinarium! It's the oldest restaurant in the world (opened sometime prior to 803 AD) and Charlemagne himself is said to have eaten there. The food is also amazing!
I love the comradary between you and Mr Terry
These were hilarious. Oh by the way, Happy Belated Birthday from a fellow Leo.
Hi Chris, yes my mum said she remembered nights in an air-raid shelter during Christmas 1941, when the Luftwaffe launched their attack on Manchester.
8:20 Wang Jinwei was a left-wing and formerly high-ranking member of the Kuomintang (the nationalist party that was founded by Sun Yat-sen, the father of the Republic of China). Due to his rivalry with Chiang Kai-shek, who eventually pushed him out of the leadership of the party, he broke away from the nationalist government and collaborated with the Japanese invaders. He lead the "Reorganized National Government of the Republic of China", the collaborationist government of the Japanese-occupied territories in China. Edit: This is the 4th time I've had to repost a comment. KZread robot, f*** you.
@jassen1924
10 ай бұрын
Such a goofball chineseman
There is another video like this one about the He Lore, more specifically about the Cold War era. The first time I watched Terry I had to condemn my laughter cause my shoulder hurt so bad, but it was pointless to do so. He is such a powerful entity, and his story is about to be expanded even more, with a new video in the making.
19:10 this is the exact moment Chris signed his own death warrant. You can really see and hear the confidence in him before he realised what he had done. By then it was too late.
@hihellohi5714
9 ай бұрын
Yeah, that part was pretty weird
Don't know why my comments keep getting deleted but here it is: If you're still taking suggestions for reactions, here are a few I've made before (if you've seen them already, please tell me so I stop bothering you about it): -Extra History's series on Persian king Khosrau I Anushirvan, as a companion to their series on Justinian. -EpicHistory TV's two-parter on the Abbasid Caliphate, easy to understand for a non-specialist. -Overly Sarcastic Productions' History Summarized on either Rome, Greece, Italy, India or China. Or their Legends Summarized series where they deep-dive into the history of a legend with a good deal of historical context behind it (Werewolves and The Wild Hunt are really good ones). -Some French history KZreadrs who do a really great job with subtitles that can be turned to English: Nota Bene (for instance his work on the American Revolution or the Comanches if you want to stay close to home) or La Folle Histoire (his video on why the N@zis escaped to Argentina is also really good). Hope one of them catches your eye!
Trust me, HE will be a recurring character in upcoming StarvHarv videos.
Man I haven't laughed so hard for a YT vid in quite a while haha amazing.
Oh dear. This was quite the video. In this alternate timeline, HE is just the hero of World War 2. I'm pretty sure he is the King of two countries at the least.
Please do more of these reactions. Hardest I've laughed in a while
I really enjoyed watching your and Mr. Terry's reactions to StarvHarv back to back for student yet informative points on these mistranslations. It seems like quite a perfect set-up that the focus video entertains is and makes us laugh, while our KZread historians encourage us to contemplate what the heck could actually be meant, or inform us of the actual actions of the cited events. I hope to see more from all three creators!
this was so funny lmao please do more of these i couldnt stop laughing
37:14 The worst thing that can happen is a medium sized explosion from the outer explosive device that compresses the plutonium uranium core. Wouldnt set off the nuke in this case because it needs to be very precise in order to make the nuclear reaction happen.
March 11: British Food 💀
@TheSkyGuy77
10 ай бұрын
*Number
7:58 "tsuma" means wife in Japanese
Hey! First off, thank you for uploading every day, you make me discover new history content all the time. If you still take recommendations for reactions, here are a few I've suggested in the past (if this gets old just tell me you've seen them before and I'll stop): -Extra History's series on Persian king Khosrau I Anushirvan, as a companion to their series on Justinian. -EpicHistory TV's two-parter on the Abbasid Caliphate (750-1258). -Overly Sarcastic Productions' History Summarized series (Rome, Greece, England, Mesopotamia, China and India) or even Legends Summarized where they go into a folkloric deep-dive that involves some historical context (no less historical than this video for instance). -Some French-language history KZreadrs who do a great job with English-available subtitles: Nota Bene's look at the American Revolution, or La Folle Histoire's videos on the N@zi escaping to Argentina. Would love to see you tackle the last one, but if you want to stay in the English-speaking world, OSP and the EpicHistory TV segment on the Abbasids are really underrated.
you should do more of theseee
Ok so Neville is not really popular anymore (I’m American so correct me if I’m wrong) but the reason JK Rowling named the not so bright kid Neville Longbottom Neville because of Neville Chamberlain being an idiot. But she obviously thought highly at the end. But I won’t say how or why so people will actually read the books and not just watch the movies
Enjoy Salzburg! I’ve been there recently and it was beautiful
@14:32 this is the second video I've watched where a history teacher has let the Air Force line go... Despite the fact it was very much still the Army Air Corps until 18 Sept 1947
This has no business being this funny😂
Please do the Cold War translation video as soon as you can. Having somebody else reacting to these videos makes it so much more funny
16:05 "That's a good idea" And that killed me 🤣
As a finn, i can confirm that Finnish is a super hard language. I mean i can speak it, but i don't understand how it works.
It's believed the Battle of Brisbane broke out due to Australian Soldiers coming to the aid of an American soldier being harassed by US Military Police, which led to a chain reaction (assisted by alcohol) and riots throughout the centre of the city. There are many theories but this is the most plausible.
You gotta continue this by watching Bad Cold War Translations
8:08 Yes, "suma" has meanings in various languages, but its specific interpretation depends on the context and the language in question. Here are some potential meanings: Swahili: In Swahili, "suma" can mean to prosper or flourish. Spanish: In Spanish, "suma" refers to the mathematical action of addition, or the result of adding numbers together. (the sum)
@FinnishDragon
10 ай бұрын
Suma is probably a mistranslation from the two battles of Summa during the Winter War (The first battle Dec. 16 to Dec. 22 1939 and the Second battle Feb. 1 to Feb. 15. 1940).
I loved your reactions! LOL. Although I was doing a lot of laughing myself!
PLEASE also do the one with the Cold War Translations, I really wanna see you reaction to some of the things in there, also new HE lore!
Operation Barbarossa was followed by Operation Barbarossa 2: Electric Boogaloo and was then finished with Operation Barbarossa 3: With a Vengence! There was Operation Barbarossa 4 planned but the war ended and Hitler fled to Brazil.
29:42 Botswanna has basically the same colors just different design. the blue is a bit lighter though i think
its great that this reaction features the actual timeline for comparison ^^ makes it more funny and informative
8:20 Wang Jinwei was a left-wing and formerly high-ranking member of the Kuomintang (the nationalist party that was founded by Sun Yat-sen, the father of the Republic of China). Due to his rivalry with Chiang Kai-shek, who eventually pushed him out of the leadership of the party, he broke away from the nationalist government and collaborated with the Japanese invaders. He lead the "Reorganized National Government of the Republic of China", the collaborationist government of the Japanese-occupied territories in China.
7:20 Finnish is also related to Estonian. Finnish, Estonian and Hungarian are the three major Finno-Ugric languages in Europe. In contrast to most of the other European (e.g. Romance, Germanic & Slavic) language groups is Finno-Ugric not part of the Indoeuropean family, but the Uralic family.
7:21 Finnish is a Finno-Ugric language, which, like Hungarian, has common roots with some languages spoken in Russia today.
This was fantastic 😂😂 Just suggesting “Jeramy Clarkson’s greatest raid of all” again 😊
@7:38 Ugro-finic languages are: hungaria, estonia and finnish. Also some ppl in norther russia speak this also (the original ugro-fins)
This He fellow sounds like a real swell guy. Hilarious video Chris!!
Does he have a memorial? If so, will there be a VTH tour of it in the near future?
Antonin Dvorak wrote his 7th symphony during the siege of Leningrad, while he was in the city. Listening to it with that factoid in your mind drastically changes how you hear it.
@klutttmuttsprutt6087
10 ай бұрын
I guess you are referring to Symphony No. 7 in C major, Op. 60, the Leningrad. It is particularly noteworthy, since the Czech composer Antonín Dvořák died in Prag as early as 1904. Dmitri Shostakovich on the other hand, by the same logic, composed Symphony No. 9 in E minor, "From the New World".
7:34-7:35 not just finnish and hungarian language relate to each other, but the estoninan as well
Another Mark Felton series to check out are his vids on Himmler’s death. He entertains the possibility he was killed by the British on purpose. Unlikely, but as you say with Eva’s body - it’s possible.
7:30 idk if you just ddnt mention it but finish is more similar to estonian, but im just gona guess that that was so obvious it didnt need a mention
Regarding Finnish language and being related to Hungarian, it stems from the two languages originating near the Urals where other similar languages like the Mari people still reside. While the nomadic Hungarians would bring their much more distinct language through being a horde and conquering the Pannonian basin from the Avars and Bulgarians, the Finnish language would more spread through cultural means most likely together with some migration, and one possibility is that it spread through trade, though it is still a mystery in many ways due to no written records.
‘Bout time you did this one!