Video summary
Hola & Olá 준비됐어요, ENGENE? 곧 만나러 갑니다 ✏️ | LATAM 언어 배우기 - ENHYPEN (엔하이픈)
Main summary
Key takeaways
Tour kickoff (Seoul to LATAM, then North America)
ENHYPEN starts by celebrating the end of their “BLOOD SAGA” Seoul concert, then shifts into planning mode as they get ready for their first-ever South America (LATAM) stop, continuing on to North America afterward.
They quickly map out tour cities (including São Paulo, Lima / Machu Picchu, Mexico City, etc.), adding playful comments—especially about places that sound familiar (notably “Vegas”). They even mention wanting to ride a “beer bike” in a Milan/WLT-style fashion.
Main segment: Crash language class for ENGENEs
The core of the segment is a crash language class for ENGENEs, starting with Spanish and then moving to Portuguese. The lessons revolve around:
- Guessing popular songs
- Learning tour-ready concert phrases
- Pronunciation practice through jokes and mini “performance” moments
Spanish highlights + jokes
Song-title guessing
They begin with song-title guessing while learning Spanish, including:
- “La Bamba” — with SUNOO blurting the answer first
- “La Cucaracha” — and they discover what it means (“cockroach”), realizing it’s basically a kids’ song
- “Bésame Mucho” — JAY confidently nails the meaning: “kiss me a lot”
- A Despacito throwback, treated like “everyone knows this intro,” confirming it means “slowly”
Pronunciation practice as comedy
Pronunciation turns into a comedic “teacher goes to war” moment:
- Rolling the “r” for “Arriba”
- Lots of back-and-forth on how excitedly to say it
- SUNGHOON impresses the teacher with his rolling
- Explaining the Spanish “j” sound as “h”
- Played for laughs with a soccer-player reference to James Rodríguez
- The conversation veers into how that changes how names might sound
Practical phrases for concerts
They learn survival phrases and audience-friendly commands, such as:
- Greetings & identity:
- “Hola, ¿cómo están?”
- “Mi nombre es…”
- “Bien / Muy bien”
- Hype and chants:
- “Arriba esas manos”
- Chanting with “Eso” for energy: “That’s right—don’t stop!”, “Más fuerte”, “¡Salten!”
- Core survival vocabulary:
- “Gracias”
- “Te amo” (“I love you”), with clarification that it’s different from “ti amo” (Italian)
Gen Z-style lines + fan-chant compliments
They also practice playful lines that sound like fan chants:
-
“¿De qué cielo te caíste?” (“Which heaven did you fall from?” = “Are you an angel?”)
-
“Eres un once sobre diez” (“11 out of 10,” used to hype SUNGHOON)
The cilantro debate (running joke)
A recurring comedic segment:
- Team “No cilantro, please” vs Team “Cilantro is fine”
- They also practice water vocabulary via “Quiero agua” and how to say “water, please.”
Portuguese highlights + mini-performance
Transition and quick brainstorming
They switch to Portuguese with the reminder that grammar is similar to Spanish, but:
- pronunciation differs
- stress patterns differ
They brainstorm what “Brazil” brings to mind:
- Neymar
- samba
- especially Brazilian funk
Brief dance / performance moment
While learning, they trigger a recognizable Brazilian funk beat, react to how it makes them move automatically, and then go into a synchronized mini routine.
Pronunciation “sound rules” drill
They focus on sound mechanics, including:
- São Paulo vs Rio de Janeiro
- tone marks
- nasal sounds
- vowel-ending rules
- How “l” at the end of a syllable changes the sound
Concert-ready Portuguese phrases (repetition-heavy)
With lots of practice, they teach phrases such as:
- Greetings:
- olá, boa noite, oi
- Identity:
- “Somos ENHYPEN”
- “Sou o(a) ___”
- Love / fan lines:
- “Amo vocês” (“I love you all”)
- “Vocês demais” (“You all are the best/awesome”)
- Audience actions:
- “Levanta!” (stand up)
- “E aí, tão curtindo?” (Are you having fun?)
- “Prontos / Preparados?” (Are you ready?)
- Counting / chant timing:
- “Um, dois, três”
- Thanks and encouragement:
- “Obrigado”
- “Que bom” (joking it’s like “tá bom,” but with a different meaning)
Ending reactions: first LATAM/South America stop energy
To close, ENHYPEN shares favorite phrases and emphasizes how big the moment is:
- it’s their first LATAM / South America tour
- they’re proud to be going prepared
They build a love-forward sign-off with:
- “Amo vocês”
- “See you soon”
and end with “See you in Brazil”, as the BLOOD SAGA world tour truly begins there.
Main personalities (as referenced)
- SUNGHOON
- SUNOO
- JAY
- JUNGWON
- NI-KI
- ENGENE / language teacher (approving pronunciation)
- Japanese/Costa-style cue: “Arigato gozaimasu” moment (implied through NI-KI/teacher interaction)