My first guess is either something from the Philippines or a Polynesian language.
I don’t know the language, but I am amused by the series of syllables that sounded vaguely like /mo fo la gi ya..
My first guess is something Indo-European, perhaps Baltic or Scandinavian, e.g. from Sweden.
And I think the speaker’s name is Simon.
Well this is another tough one! It sounds like an African language to me and I think I can hear a tiny bit of French influence and maybe even some sounds that sound a bit Arabic, so I’m going to stab an educated guess and pick Chad. Maybe it’ll turn out to be Ngambay, the biggest language there, let’s see….
Judging from the sounds of it alone, my guess is some divergent German dialect, perhaps Low German.
The language is Lule Sámi (julevsámegiella), a Western Sámi language spoken in Norway and Sweden .
My first guess is either something from the Philippines or a Polynesian language.
I don’t know the language, but I am amused by the series of syllables that sounded vaguely like /mo fo la gi ya..
My first guess is something Indo-European, perhaps Baltic or Scandinavian, e.g. from Sweden.
And I think the speaker’s name is Simon.
Well this is another tough one! It sounds like an African language to me and I think I can hear a tiny bit of French influence and maybe even some sounds that sound a bit Arabic, so I’m going to stab an educated guess and pick Chad. Maybe it’ll turn out to be Ngambay, the biggest language there, let’s see….
Judging from the sounds of it alone, my guess is some divergent German dialect, perhaps Low German.
The language is Lule Sámi (julevsámegiella), a Western Sámi language spoken in Norway and Sweden .
The recording comes from YouTube
I heard “sverige” at 02:24 (or so) but was mislead by that into an Indo-European direction …