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  • @rezazazu
    @rezazazu3 күн бұрын

    Such a holistic approach to analyze language difficulty. Subscribed and hooked on your videos already. 😊

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa3 күн бұрын

    Thank you so much! I do my best to make things clear and approachable.

  • @mrsaphi4467
    @mrsaphi44673 күн бұрын

    Bonjour ! J'ai découvert ta chaîne totalement par hasard et je dois dire que c'est une bonne surprise ! J'ai hâte de voir la suite de ton aventure. J'utilise exactement la même méthode pour apprendre l'anglais, c'est amusant.😄

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa3 күн бұрын

    Merci beaucoup ! Oui, c'est très puissant et motivant d'utiliser les vidéos et les intérêts pour guider l'apprentissage d'une langue. Il est possible que je jouerais quelque chose en anglais au futur, peut-être ça t'aiderait aussi !

  • @BamaHmmer1
    @BamaHmmer16 күн бұрын

    I'm so exited for the new update! I hope we get to see something cool with the auto crafters soon because I'm really looking forward to it. Are you able to make dripstone from the block they grow on? Great video by the way!!!

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa5 күн бұрын

    Yeah I haven't looked into the update much at all, hoping to be pleasantly surprised by some new features!

  • @LiedeaJonz
    @LiedeaJonz11 күн бұрын

    Yesss gimkit for the win fr

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa9 күн бұрын

    😂 I guess that counts

  • @zetrocadartse646
    @zetrocadartse64611 күн бұрын

    I used to practice my English by answering to ppl 9n Fortnite voice chat

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa11 күн бұрын

    Hopefully they were nice!

  • @zetrocadartse646
    @zetrocadartse64611 күн бұрын

    @@linguacarpa surprisingly yes lol

  • @MoodySB
    @MoodySB11 күн бұрын

    I also notice that another way to learn languages is to join Discord servers specifically for the language of choice. Discords meant for “language learning” kind of force you to be grammatically/punctually correct, going on a server not like that (for example a German server for Valorant) lets you speak like they would to each other. A mix of both is super helpful though.

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa11 күн бұрын

    Yeah Discord can be a great tool here. Especially when you join servers over common interests, it's easy to find people to talk with.

  • @tina-marino
    @tina-marino12 күн бұрын

    This video is excellent. I mean the strategy, explanation, educational content, and production. All the details, It's pro. Just some encouragement for you, keep going, this channel is going to blow up.

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa12 күн бұрын

    My goodness, you are so kind! Thanks a bunch! The encouragement certainly helps. I hope the video was helpful for you 👍🏻

  • @BamaHmmer1
    @BamaHmmer113 күн бұрын

    This video was 🔥! I remember being scared to learn French because I didn't want to offend anybody but I'm glad I did. I'm also very glad my awesome French teacher taught us a lot about numbers because counting in French is tricky! Keep making more awesome videos!!!

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa12 күн бұрын

    Haha no kidding, numbers go kinda crazy in french sometimes! Thanks for your kind comment!

  • @madiel940
    @madiel94016 күн бұрын

    Amazing video clap clap for you you are so wise, thanks for be here and share this ideas 🎉

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa15 күн бұрын

    Thank you for being here too!

  • @BamaHmmer1
    @BamaHmmer116 күн бұрын

    I would absolutely love to have an nice place with listening resources. Especially if it wasn't crazy expensive like they usually are. I remember a very important point that I was taught that trying to go from French to English to the item was a lot harder than just going from French to item. I guess doing this is probably like how you learned your main language from scratch as a kid because you couldn't relate it to another language as a kid. Nice video Carpa!!!

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa15 күн бұрын

    Yes that's right! When learning a new language we have to translate some things, but to lead all of our vocab learning with that can get in the way a bit of our natural language-learning processes. Thanks!

  • @wallacy2348
    @wallacy234817 күн бұрын

    Great video!

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa16 күн бұрын

    Thank you so much! Hope it was helpful or informative.

  • @Mcflibb
    @Mcflibb17 күн бұрын

    w brian moment

  • @jesus042
    @jesus04217 күн бұрын

    the chalkboard 🤭

  • @rohithkumarsp
    @rohithkumarsp19 күн бұрын

    they list Tamil and Telugu but not Kannada ? wut

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa19 күн бұрын

    I'm guessing they choose the languages on their list by popularity and utility for their needs, but regardless there are obviously a lot of languages that are just left off entirely.

  • @LxoEditz4Life
    @LxoEditz4Life20 күн бұрын

    Leo here and my learning lvl is prob basic lvl maybe low intermediate lvl max

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa19 күн бұрын

    I'd say that's a good estimate! Still working through understanding a lot of familiar things but at the same time you have capabilities to write and speak, even if it's only about really simple topics.

  • @Mcflibb
    @Mcflibb20 күн бұрын

    w brayan

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa20 күн бұрын

    Brayan is in ze kitchen

  • @eEeEqw
    @eEeEqw20 күн бұрын

    W Thumbnail

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa20 күн бұрын

    Merci !

  • @AthanasiosJapan
    @AthanasiosJapan20 күн бұрын

    Ideally, use all you senses. Listen, taste (speak), see(read) and feel(write) the language. Now, if you want to smell the language, you can smell food from the country that the language is spoken.

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa20 күн бұрын

    I agree! It's best to take in the language in the culture together, especially when you have the chance to travel. I think food is one of the best reasons to travel. So much culture and community to experience.

  • @AthanasiosJapan
    @AthanasiosJapan22 күн бұрын

    Chinese has easy grammar, but difficult pronunciation and difficult writing system. Japanese has easy pronunciation, but difficult grammar and difficult writing system. Korean has easy writing system, but difficult grammar and pronunciation. Arabic has difficult writing system, difficult grammar and difficult pronunciation. In Chinese, Japanese and Korean you have one easy aspect that you can master easily and get some confidence. In Arabic all apects are hard.

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa21 күн бұрын

    Dang that sounds ROUGH lol. I have never tried to formally study Arabic but from the glances I've taken at it occasionally it seemed very intimidating.

  • @Eren______
    @Eren______22 күн бұрын

    As a native Turkish speaker, Turkish grammar is very similar to the Japanese grammar. Its so similar that if it wasn’t for the vocabulary difference, I’m sure I would be able to fully understand it.

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa22 күн бұрын

    That's very interesting to me that two languages that developed in such different ways could end up with some similarities like that!

  • @AimAdolfAim
    @AimAdolfAim23 күн бұрын

    It all depends on the native language usually. To be honest speaking isn't the hard part, it's spelling (for me), spelling in English is a nightmare when writing a paragraph.

  • @charlessimons1147
    @charlessimons114723 күн бұрын

    Im late

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa22 күн бұрын

    Very

  • @Mcflibb
    @Mcflibb24 күн бұрын

    brayan 1v1 on pvp leg uh cee

  • @ulrikof.2486
    @ulrikof.248625 күн бұрын

    Afaik, the most complicated language is the conlang Ițkuîl (if not counting intentionally hard fun languages like the ones made for Agna Schwa's "cursed conlang" competition).

  • @Mcflibb
    @Mcflibb26 күн бұрын

    w brian

  • @BamaHmmer1
    @BamaHmmer126 күн бұрын

    Y u no attrape le tailleur de pierre? C'est le parti tres important! Very nice house start though. Are you exited for tricky trials (1.21.1)?

  • @BamaHmmer1
    @BamaHmmer126 күн бұрын

    Btw, can zombies break doors in hardcore? I'd think so but I'm not sure.

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa26 күн бұрын

    Je ne l'utilise pas souvent... je le prendrai plus tard ! Merci ! Oui, Je suis curieux de voir les changements.

  • @Cookieberdon
    @Cookieberdon27 күн бұрын

    J'étudie le français au lycée. Vos vidéos sont très utiles, vous parlez très lentement et je peux tout comprendre, continuez s'il vous plaît !

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa26 күн бұрын

    Formidable ! Je suis content de pouvoir t'aider.

  • @Mcflibb
    @Mcflibb27 күн бұрын

    brian we should for realsies fight on leg a see

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa26 күн бұрын

    lol "leg-a-see"

  • @Mcflibb
    @Mcflibb26 күн бұрын

    @@linguacarpa WE TAKE THAT AS A YES

  • @takeyoshiful
    @takeyoshiful29 күн бұрын

    You omitted "i have" in Japanese, although it still makes sense, i dont think it gives justice to this comparison

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa29 күн бұрын

    I omitted it because Japanese is a pro-drop language. It is more normal to say it without than it is to include it. For French and English however, the subjects are required.

  • @jesusfuentes6969
    @jesusfuentes696929 күн бұрын

    Japanese is quite easy though.

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa29 күн бұрын

    For your average native English speaker? It's not. That's great if you're personally having easy success with it though.

  • @jack_the_nascar_fan08
    @jack_the_nascar_fan0829 күн бұрын

    Hi Mr carpenter

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpa28 күн бұрын

    Hi!

  • @Eason22848
    @Eason22848Ай бұрын

    Doing great carp

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpaАй бұрын

    Thanks man!

  • @sudanemamimikiki1527
    @sudanemamimikiki1527Ай бұрын

    the hardest language in the world is the language of love.0

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpaАй бұрын

    LOL yes you may be onto something. We need to contact the Department of State and get this list updated 😆

  • @ulrikof.2486
    @ulrikof.248625 күн бұрын

    Some speak it well.

  • @AimAdolfAim
    @AimAdolfAim23 күн бұрын

    💯

  • @OsedayCan
    @OsedayCanАй бұрын

    This is a stupid list. I speak Turkish English French and Korean. If you put Korean and Japanese in category 4 along with Arabic, you're just stupid. First let's start with Arabic, if you put Arabic on there you have to put all other Afro-Asiatic languages too like Amharic which stupidly was put on category 3, on top of all that, Arabic grammar isn't that far off from Indo-European languages. Now let's talk about Korean and Japanese putting them as category 4 is correct but NOT putting Mongolian, Finnish and Turkic languages as category 4 instead of category 3 is straight up stupid. Korean, Japanese, Mongolian, Finnish, Hungarian, Estonian and Turkic languages have very similar grammatical structures due to them being agglutinative languages and they are very far from English. Whoever made this list in the government was just straight up stupid and definitely did not do their homework properly. It was probably some random guy they told to do this whole page.

  • @joshuvs4684
    @joshuvs4684Ай бұрын

    Asian languages 🫠

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpaАй бұрын

    And yet we must press on haha

  • @nathangerber1547
    @nathangerber1547Ай бұрын

    German is the only level two language. It’s similar to English, but a horrible pain in the butt.

  • @piemonstereater
    @piemonstereaterАй бұрын

    Japanese might be very difficult, but it is very rewarding. I've had the pleasure of working with students in Japan and going over there for school in the past. Incredible experience. Also I find it helps in terms of offering new ways of thinking about things.

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpaАй бұрын

    I'm supposed to go this year and I'm really looking forward to it! The language has been very rewarding despite its challenges, and I always treasure new perspectives when traveling. Thanks for sharing

  • @monkut
    @monkutАй бұрын

    You can say,."'I' have an apple", but as in your example, it's ok to drop the, "I", if context is known.

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpaАй бұрын

    Right. And it's more common to rely on the context I believe. Like pronouns in Spanish.

  • @elijahdage5523
    @elijahdage5523Ай бұрын

    As a native English speaker, English is the hardest language.

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpaАй бұрын

    Me as a native English speaker still trying to spell "receive" correctly 💀

  • @AimAdolfAim
    @AimAdolfAim23 күн бұрын

    The spelling in English is hard

  • @Mcflibb
    @McflibbАй бұрын

    ou est brayan

  • @Denabella
    @DenabellaАй бұрын

    Irish Gaelic... And it's not even on the list.

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpaАй бұрын

    Yeah it's certainly not an extensive list. I think Gaelic sounds beautiful.

  • @Ryo42526
    @Ryo42526Ай бұрын

    English (or any European language for that matter) is a fucking doozy from a Japanese (or Korean) native speaker’s perspective. Keep that in mind when you speak in English with East Asians struggling with English. We’re speaking backwards while piecing together completely unfamiliar words and conjugating verbs most of the time.

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpaАй бұрын

    Makes sense since our languages are so different! Trust me, I see no reason to get impatient with anyone trying to use a non-native language. I just love that people do their best to communicate regardless of how proficient they are.

  • @user-zo7bi1qu1z
    @user-zo7bi1qu1zАй бұрын

    English is my first language, but having ADHD I think languages like Japanese are really helpful because I say words in the order that my brain thinks of them, and there's fewer conjugation requirements for things like pronoun-verb agreement. Also the writing system gives my brain more distincticely visual cues to work with, versus having to process an alphabet 😊

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpaАй бұрын

    Interesting perspective!

  • @nikchas
    @nikchasАй бұрын

    Japanese is really hard but for me it makes so much more sense than for example English or German

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpaАй бұрын

    What is your native language?

  • @nikchas
    @nikchasАй бұрын

    @@linguacarpa the founder of all slavic/balkan languages

  • @johnnygibbs7709
    @johnnygibbs7709Ай бұрын

    Dude why didn’t you explain what a “object marking particle” is?

  • @RaysOfPivot
    @RaysOfPivotАй бұрын

    Marks the object of a sentence. If we had one, I'll use X for example. It'd be like "I have an apple X" Or "I throw the ball X to Sally" We don't have those in English. Japanese has a whole bunch of these weird particles

  • @asaphyx_
    @asaphyx_Ай бұрын

    I've been learning Korean for 7 months and oh boy yeah... it's tough but! Regardless! It's such a great breath of fresh air when you can use it semi proficiently and have a conversation with someone in the language they're comfortable in. There is no limit to our ability if we push ourselves. Live your video and if you have a discord server or ID, I'd love to chat about language with you! 감사합니다! 좋은 하루 보내요! ㅎㅎ

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpaАй бұрын

    Thank you! And I agree wholeheartedly. Sharing different languages with people from cultures around the world is a deeply satisfying connection and human experience. I'm hoping to build out some type of community hub for language learners to connect in the near future. Thank you for your interest!

  • @primeyoriichi
    @primeyoriichiАй бұрын

    As someone learning japanese. These ぃゃゅょゎっぇぉぅぁare different to やよゆいえつおあ and make a difference and these 5 are different シ ッ ソ ツン . And this ン isn't ソ and this ン is "n(ん)" and this ソ is "so(そ)" and this シャツ (shatsu) is shirt but しゃつ (also shatsu) isn't shatsu because it's hiragana (the alphabet you learn first) and the other is katakana. And the size does change because hiragana is what becomes kanji and katakana in the Japanese keyboard you type the letter of katakana you want and it should appear in the top section above numbers and kanji is you either type the letter or letter combinations If you use duolingo (I recommend using it along other sources and Google isn't 100% accurate so use deepl and don't use anime to help it exaggerates alot it does say alot of correct meanings but if you're learning you should instead use anime when you can understand most of it that way you learn the same way you learn English in movies but do double check the meanings of words) for duolingo once you reach unit 3 in section one it begins using katakana so learn the characters before unit 3 using the character learning does keep your streak and give achievements Fun fact:if you see a screen with Japanese keyboards the English language is in it but it's the same as the Japanese keyboard in which you have one letter and by clicking on it you get another 2 letters and one number on the Japanese and Korean is the same so Yea texting in English is way better in those places if they don't install another keyboard (Microsoft keyboard on phone let's you install different languages all you do is swipe the space keyboard in it and it change language)

  • @pianissimo5951
    @pianissimo5951Ай бұрын

    why 117 views???

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpaАй бұрын

    I don't know! I will keep working to make my content better. 🫠

  • @Nerukenshi1233
    @Nerukenshi1233Ай бұрын

    This is at DLI with folks that score high on the DLAB and are motivated by being in the military and having no choice but to pass. Dont think that these hours are accurate to your relatively unmotivated, un vetted butt. Give yourself time and dont crap on your accomplishments by comparison to others. With love, a DLI dropout

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpaАй бұрын

    That's helpful insight, thank you! And I strongly agree on the "give yourself time" part. Language is tough, and it pays to be patient but keep at it.

  • @benno7481
    @benno7481Ай бұрын

    True. Recent korean (cat IV) dli graduate here. The amount of times i wanted to quit but simply couldn’t because it was my ‘job’ is wild. Every day is a grind and they pile on top of each other for so long culminating in one final test, the DLPT. I know for certain theres no way i would have learned korean if it wasn’t for dli.

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpaАй бұрын

    Sounds rough but I know for some people that when you take their other options away they get it DONE. Congrats btw!

  • @marchwhitlock6455
    @marchwhitlock6455Ай бұрын

    🔵pōmum🔵 🟠habeō🟠 As we can see here: it must be as difficult for French speakers to learn Latin as it is for them to learn Japanese! One certainly couldn’t be descended from the other… 😂

  • @forsakenediamawakened3019
    @forsakenediamawakened3019Ай бұрын

    well subject is typically implied in the verb and unless it’s a pronoun the subject is typically not omitted

  • @marchwhitlock6455
    @marchwhitlock6455Ай бұрын

    @@forsakenediamawakened3019 Good thing then that ‘ego’ is a pronoun and completely grammatical for me to have omitted.

  • @linguacarpa
    @linguacarpaАй бұрын

    Certainly. I'm sure if we looked at more examples japanese and Latin would certainly have more similarities than Latin and French lol

  • @forsakenediamawakened3019
    @forsakenediamawakened3019Ай бұрын

    @@marchwhitlock6455 if the subject was for example “Julius” the sentence would then become “Iulius pōmum habet”

  • @marchwhitlock6455
    @marchwhitlock6455Ай бұрын

    @@forsakenediamawakened3019 I know????