The Linguistics Iceberg Explained

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  • čas přidán 27. 07. 2023
  • Patreon: / duncanclarke
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    Explaining the story behind the most interesting linguistic theories, artifacts, and languages.
    This completes the cognitive science iceberg trilogy alongside my philosophy and psychology icebergs.

Komentáře • 6K

  • @k3dr1
    @k3dr1 Před 10 měsíci +13640

    Noooo mom I'm not doing drugs, I'm just watching a thoroughly researched and well put together video that demonstrates obscure and interesting facts about linguistics, presented in a trendy fashion employing the action of going down the icebergs to uncover progressively more niche entries while darkening the tone of narration, for the next 2 hours and 7 minutes

  • @TheCognitiveDissident
    @TheCognitiveDissident Před 9 měsíci +1769

    Idk why, but calling a bear “the brown one,” seems infinitely more terrifying then just having an actual word for it

    • @paulkanja
      @paulkanja Před 9 měsíci +75

      you can think of it more as "Brownie" instead

    • @cam5816
      @cam5816 Před 9 měsíci +38

      @@paulkanjaThe horror. The horror

    • @yarno8086
      @yarno8086 Před 8 měsíci +7

      I think it's funny that he pronounced the dutch "beer" like the beverage, which would be "bier" in dutch

    • @user-jr3zr2mp9c
      @user-jr3zr2mp9c Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@paulkanjahell om earth

    • @slym741
      @slym741 Před 8 měsíci +21

      "Fear of a name increases fear of a thing itself."

  • @ddburdette
    @ddburdette Před 4 měsíci +637

    I’m gratified to find that fifty years after I majored in Linguistics, the principles I learned have withstood the test of time.

    • @tr3vk4m
      @tr3vk4m Před 4 měsíci +3

      oyce lingwidge!

    • @tiyenin
      @tiyenin Před 3 měsíci +4

      1:53:09 is this Loss??

    • @vessel.001
      @vessel.001 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@tiyenin yes

    • @m.i.c.h.o
      @m.i.c.h.o Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@tiyenin yes D:

    • @plantzommy
      @plantzommy Před 3 dny

      Except that that’s not how languages are learned anymore.

  • @Lee-jh6cr
    @Lee-jh6cr Před 5 měsíci +482

    Pidgin. In college I had an Arab boyfriend and picked up conversational Arabic. His cousin was struggling to learn English, so my boyfriend asked me to help him. This guy just couldn't get it. But after a couple months spending so much time trying, we developed our own pidgin. No one could understand us! One example I remember was 'manager'. He didn't like his apartment manager, so that is what he said when he didn't like something. A woman he found unattractive was a manager. And so our conversations went. Mansour asked what the hell did I do to his cousin? The Arabs found it funny. The cousin went home, never to learn English.

  • @coconuthead4923
    @coconuthead4923 Před 9 měsíci +1977

    The funniest language story I heard is when an older German couple couldn't have a child, so they adopted an orphan baby from China. They would then proceed to buy Chinese dictionaries and Chinese and German schoolbooks. When asked why they did this, they replied that they wanted to be able to communicate with the baby, once it started speaking.

    • @Sir_TophamHatt
      @Sir_TophamHatt Před 9 měsíci +204

      Strongly doubt that really happened, but would be very funny if it did

    • @coconuthead4923
      @coconuthead4923 Před 9 měsíci +128

      @@Sir_TophamHatt Yeah I'm not sure either, I just heard about it. But some people are more than capable to do something stupid I'm sure.

    • @vrillionaire88
      @vrillionaire88 Před 9 měsíci +58

      I am Slavic, but I am a native English speaker. Once I started learning about my people's languages, the more I realized how crippling a language English can be to other people's and their ability to communicate. I suspect there's a link between neurological trends in ethnicities and the development of language. Maybe a Chinese baby would not speak Chinese, but maybe that baby would be better served to learn it.

    • @coconuthead4923
      @coconuthead4923 Před 9 měsíci +39

      @@vrillionaire88 interesting theory. I know many ethnic Chinese people that grew up in Europe, they learn Chinese usually just as fast as anybody else.

    • @vrillionaire88
      @vrillionaire88 Před 9 měsíci +14

      @@coconuthead4923 I have an exceedingly high level grasp of my language. Languages are built on archetypes, not merely found in culture but seem to be environmental adaptations, components of which make their way into grammatical structure, etymology, and even letters themselves. There seems to be some cause for belief that the PIE derived languages have similar enough archetypes that translation isn't a burden, but not all languages come from PIE, and slavic languages diverged from the germanic languages so far back that slavs named Germans mute/unintelligible. The components that make slavic languages so different from other IE languages do not stop at the words, but leave remnants in the mind for many generations.
      It might interest you to know that the largely Germanic descended people of the US respond most to Germanic derived words, and is so validated through study and application to be a primary focus of politicians in their speeches.

  • @fasidamv
    @fasidamv Před 10 měsíci +2278

    LEVEL 1
    0:34 Octopi
    1:39 French silent letters
    2:17 Dearest Creature in creation
    3:12 Tower of Babel
    3:51 Duolingo
    5:08 Omelette du fromage
    5:42 Pig Latin
    6:57 Hardest and Easiest language
    8:26 American Monolingualism
    9:44 Faux cyrillic
    10:18 Quick brown fox
    11:10 German is angry
    12:24 Very long german words
    LEVEL 2
    15:20 Ampersand origin
    16:17 "Untranslatable words"
    18:39 Ghoti
    19:15 Esperanto
    21:19 100 words for snow
    22:46 Aoccrding to rscheearch
    23:35 Click consonants
    24:21 Army and a navy
    24:55 Newspeak
    25:27 Rosetta Stone
    26:35 Shi shi shi shi shi
    27:07 Had had
    28:12 Colorless green ideas sleep furiously
    29:29 Buffalo buffalo
    30:42 Gendered articles
    31:46 Code-switching
    33:39 Boustrophedon
    34:10 Sapir-whorf
    35:49 Descriptivism and Prescriptivism
    LEVEL 3
    37:26 Great vowel shift
    38:30 Bhutanese passport
    41:23 Bear taboo
    43:23 Tea and cha
    43:57 Critical period
    44:48 Voynich Manuscript
    46:34 Toki Pona
    47:48 This is a wug
    49:12 cockney rhyming slang
    50:43 Pirahã
    52:37 Volapük
    53:42 Lorem ipsum origin
    54:26 Rødgrød med fløde
    54:39 Mele Kalikimaka
    55:00 Grzegorz brz-
    55:07 Hopi time
    56:20 Kiki Bouba
    57:58 Ye olde
    59:02 Loglan
    59:42 Pidgins and creoles
    1:00:33 Folk etymologies
    LEVEL 4
    1:02:27 Silbo Gomero
    1:03:09 Ceceo
    1:04:15 Kurgan hypothesis
    1:05:00 Wasei-Eigo
    1:06:31 Schleicher's fable
    1:06:57 Latin wolf taboo
    1:08:21 Hreks deiuoskwe
    1:08:52 Prisencolinensinainciusol
    1:10:10 Migration theory
    1:11:16 Russian blue
    1:12:39 Dyeus Phter
    1:13:30 Labov R
    LEVEL 5
    1:14:33 Foreign accent syndrome
    1:16:00 Etymology of OK is unknown
    1:17:07 Generative grammar
    1:18:26 Koko gorilla
    1:20:29 Mbabaram dog
    1:21:21 Biang
    1:22:12 Solresol
    1:23:12 Singapore stone
    1:24:51 Hlewagastiz holtijaz
    1:26:05 Anglish
    1:28:44 Universal Mom and Dad
    1:30:04 Glossolalia
    1:31:02 Dord
    LEVEL 6
    1:31:52 Ithkuil
    1:34:45 Basque-Icelandic pidgin
    1:36:21 Butterly refers to their poop
    1:36:56 Seaphim glyph
    1:37:38 Tsakonian
    1:38:34 Proto World
    1:39:47 Linear B
    1:41:45 Innateness
    1:44:13 English is a pidgin
    LEVEL 7
    1:46:11 Stoned Ape Theory
    1:48:18 Sun Language
    1:49:49 Edo Nyland
    1:52:02 Italian gestures from romans
    1:53:03 Curse of 39
    1:54:37 Codex seraphinianus
    1:56:06 Nicaraguan sign language
    1:57:15 Zzxjoanw
    1:58:04 Phaistos disc
    2:00:08 Swedish yes sound
    LEVEL 8
    2:00:32 Indian welsh
    2:02:56 Helicopter Hieroglyph
    2:03:48 Katakana Hebrew
    2:04:23 Proto-Indo-European 'Nine' and 'New'
    2:04:48 Neanderthal Language
    2:05:32 Learn languages while sleeping really works

  • @Sigma.Infinity
    @Sigma.Infinity Před 5 měsíci +409

    This video is staggeringly fascinating. I've been watching, pausing to make lengthy cross references and investigate topics more deeply, then returning here and watching more. I had no idea when I started that I would be immersed in these things for 5.5 hours.

  • @jackfrogge
    @jackfrogge Před 6 měsíci +103

    My high school Spanish teacher helped me understand masc/fem nouns by presenting them as arbitrary categories rather than logically consistent “boy and girl” nouns. So instead of “La barba” being a “girl noun” it was a “la” noun, in a catergory that “niña” and “mujer” also fell into

    • @zephlodwick1009
      @zephlodwick1009 Před 5 měsíci +15

      It doesn't help that English uses the same word for both grammatical gender and gender gender, because Victorians wanted a nicer way of talking about the sexes. Originally, "gender" just meant "type," as "species" did. Maybe there's an alternate universe where Romance languages separate genders roughly by species, and we talk about grammatical species.

    • @charlytaylor1748
      @charlytaylor1748 Před 5 měsíci

      and 'polla'

    • @emiliabobelia
      @emiliabobelia Před 4 měsíci +2

      this kind of thinking has been essential for me in understanding turkish conjugations, especially since its not a gendered language

    • @user-gr5tx6rd4h
      @user-gr5tx6rd4h Před 4 měsíci +2

      In Norwegian there are three genders: masc/fem/neutral. (So also in German, Russian etc.)
      The Norwegian word "utepils" (pronounced "oo-teh-pils") was mentioned but wrongly written and pronounced. (Beer you drink outside, mostly in the summertime)

    • @mynameusedtobelong
      @mynameusedtobelong Před měsícem +2

      Yeah this is way better, it would help a lot be called "gramatical genre/kind" insted of "gramatical gender"

  • @bckends_
    @bckends_ Před 10 měsíci +1595

    So 1:12:06, the "grzegorz brzeczyszczykiewicz", refers to an old polish comedy movie titled "how i started the second world war". In one scene the main character named "grzegorz brzeczyszczykiewicz" is asked to indentify himself to a german officer who, obviously, struggles to write it down. Then he is asked to state where he lives to which he replies "chrząszczyrzewoszyce (the city), powiat łękołody (administrative unit)". The entire thing sounds like if you threw 10kg of aluminum foil down a staircase and a plausible polish name at the same time. the reaction of the german officer is pretty entertaining too, especially for a movie made in 1969. It pokes fun at the ridiculous pronunciation and an abundance of difficult and uncommon sounds in polish. The movie and the scene are cult classics in poland to this day (source: im polish)

    • @kasiamakaruk3531
      @kasiamakaruk3531 Před 9 měsíci +162

      one error: his actual name isn't grzegorz brzęczyszczykiewicz, he just made that up on the spot so germans won't get his real personal information. It was a tactic to confuse him and probably he also wanted to just annoy him XD

    • @smirnovamaria9611
      @smirnovamaria9611 Před 9 měsíci +53

      Im not polish, but I watched this film 10 years ago with some friends, and to this day we sometimes will just randomly say his name to each other.
      Great film

    • @Karin-fj3eu
      @Karin-fj3eu Před 9 měsíci +18

      I thought you were keysmashing that

    • @mikaelsza
      @mikaelsza Před 9 měsíci +8

      This should be pinned!!

    • @20somethingcimena
      @20somethingcimena Před 9 měsíci +10

      "especially for a movie made in 1969" movies had already been an entertaining and established medium for many decades at that point. Are you a 14 year old

  • @brianb.6356
    @brianb.6356 Před 10 měsíci +1325

    You missed the absolutely best (and most metal) pangram, "Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow!"

    • @sca8217
      @sca8217 Před 10 měsíci +133

      Sounds like something Kratos would yell angrily in Egypt.

    • @ametrinefirebird7125
      @ametrinefirebird7125 Před 10 měsíci +29

      I was thinking the same thing! I love that one. It's smaller, right?

    • @burst1323
      @burst1323 Před 10 měsíci +51

      This sounds like some yugi oh shit

    • @sibanbgd100
      @sibanbgd100 Před 10 měsíci +15

      ​@@burst1323probably reminds you of Solemn vow and Yu-Gi-Oh general Egyptian theming

    • @fergusallen1759
      @fergusallen1759 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Theres no y hows it a pangram

  • @lovekittyforever
    @lovekittyforever Před 4 měsíci +60

    I watched 10-20 min of this video every night before bed for a few weeks now, and it has been such a cozy journey. So interesting and also well edited with funny memes here and there, thank you!! On to the next one :)

  • @saidas505
    @saidas505 Před 5 měsíci +28

    5:45 in Finnish there was a "language" called "i-kieli" very popular among kids when I went to school. However it was not as complex as the one shown in the video: children just replaced every vowel in a word with the vowel "i".

  • @bleh9738
    @bleh9738 Před 10 měsíci +771

    Rød grød med fløde is something danish people ask non natives to say, since it uses pretty much all of danishes effed up phonemes resulting in the danes laughing at their poor german friends.

    • @megaman13able
      @megaman13able Před 10 měsíci +29

      Ahh... a Shibboleth it is

    • @mittenielsen8424
      @mittenielsen8424 Před 10 měsíci +9

      Det bløde D er alle andres nedgang xD

    • @user-mu3ld5yo2x
      @user-mu3ld5yo2x Před 10 měsíci +12

      @@mittenielsen8424that is like English mixed with German: “er” like “are” and “blød” like “blithe” in English, everything else is like German: “das (dat in dialect) ”, “Niedergang”, “andere”

    • @mile.9768
      @mile.9768 Před 10 měsíci +4

      Röd grode med flode? 😂

    • @Diogenes_ofSinope
      @Diogenes_ofSinope Před 10 měsíci +2

      I'm a German who dabbles in learning northern Germanic languages and I must say danish in general and the nasal swedish i in words like "bli" are really hard for me to learn.

  • @rtrmorais
    @rtrmorais Před 10 měsíci +962

    About the Voynich manuscript my personal hypotesis is that it was one of the earliest exemples of a nerd doing worldbuilding. Created a entire new language with its own script and the manuscript is basically worldbuilding hence the non existing plants.

  • @TheSprinklerNinja
    @TheSprinklerNinja Před 2 měsíci +113

    "Octopussies" is also acceptable

  • @wackyg707
    @wackyg707 Před 3 měsíci +18

    This is legit in my top 10 most interesting video of all time. Great to see someone who learnt french in Canada! Cheers

  • @watcher314159
    @watcher314159 Před 10 měsíci +489

    The "taboo bear" thing is literally to avoid attracting the attention of bears. Apparently in Yellowstone the bears have learned the English word "bear" and tend to move towards the source of the sound since it usually means an easy source of food. Thus, we may soon need new euphemisms for both our safety and theirs.

    • @illillyillyo
      @illillyillyo Před 9 měsíci +30

      That was an oval; it has to be a circle!

    • @Uffda.
      @Uffda. Před 9 měsíci +15

      Ohh, neat! While we can’t say for certain this is specifically why they did, I’d say it’s entirely reasonable and a probable component. I do know also that bears have religious/spiritual significance for some folks in the broader geographic area (like in Perm region iirc? I’m not sure distinction of Perm, Permian, and Perm-Krai without looking them up, apologies if ‘Perm region’ is incorrect/nonsensical). And there’s even archaeological evidence of (long extinct) cave bears having spiritual significance, too.

    • @dandywaysofliving
      @dandywaysofliving Před 9 měsíci +21

      "Furry Tank"
      I'll take my noble prize in a pastel funko pop shape 😉

    • @accelerationquanta5816
      @accelerationquanta5816 Před 9 měsíci

      We should exterminate these dangerous animals.

    • @user-pv2fz6wm2g
      @user-pv2fz6wm2g Před 9 měsíci +2

      time to reinvent the word bear

  • @forthrightgambitia1032
    @forthrightgambitia1032 Před 10 měsíci +406

    The Bhutanese passport one had me in stitches, and the way people responded to it was even funnier than the original sound recording.

    • @neeemal4545
      @neeemal4545 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Here is huge china mass. I love her

    • @Sir_TophamHatt
      @Sir_TophamHatt Před 9 měsíci +8

      Changing it would be racist, but so would not changing it lol

    • @forthrightgambitia1032
      @forthrightgambitia1032 Před 9 měsíci +27

      @@Sir_TophamHatt The woke paradox.

    • @vladyslavanufriiev1224
      @vladyslavanufriiev1224 Před 9 měsíci +12

      BOUTANESE PASSPOOOooooo⁰⁰⁰°°rt

    • @Nanami_X_Higurama
      @Nanami_X_Higurama Před 9 měsíci +7

      Honestly I think they should've asked a Bhutanese person or their king whether to keep it or not , lol .

  • @ultimatexl302
    @ultimatexl302 Před 4 měsíci +9

    Your meme selection and jokes are S tier! Can't wait for another long format video from you!

  • @ShAmAiCh777
    @ShAmAiCh777 Před 5 měsíci +26

    Btw, belorussian and ukrainian languages also have different words for blue and sky blue (Maybe other slavic languages too). But in russian language we have one word for violet and purple. I mean we have fancy words for them like cian that you mentioned in the video. But most of the time we just called them both "фиолетовый"(which is more purple than violet i guess) or just called them "cветло-фиолетовый"(light purple) and "тёмно-фиолетовый"(dark purple). When i speak english i never use word "violet" i call it purple too.
    Even rainbow colours are different in russian. In english there are red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet. But in russian we have kind of red, orange, yellow, green, sky blue, blue, purple. So no signs of indigo at all. For us indigo is blue, and "english blue" is sky blue

    • @ImAntibus
      @ImAntibus Před 4 měsíci +2

      What about сиреневый

    • @emiliabobelia
      @emiliabobelia Před 4 měsíci +2

      most english speakers also just say light or dark purple too, especially in casual conversation. artists are the most likely to use the official terms for the shades of color

    • @ShAmAiCh777
      @ShAmAiCh777 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@ImAntibus I guess when you say "сиреневый" you just mean "фиолетовый", if you are not a designer or an artist of course. A lot of people use this fancy color names when they just want to say "purple" without intention to describe the certain tone of it. So for me "сиреневый" is in one group with "маджента", "фуксия", and "пурпурный". I don't even know the difference between them

    • @Lee-jh6cr
      @Lee-jh6cr Před 4 měsíci +2

      I have a couple books on color theory (buried behind other books - no time to get them now) that explain Russians have a different way of categorizing and perceiving blue than the west. It explains how our language can alter how we think and see things. One book displays a swatch of seemingly identical blues. Yet one is slightly different and is called by a different name in Russian. Most westerners can't pick out that blue. I had to look it up - only then could I distinguish it from the others. Just barely. I kept coming back to fix it in my mind. I had to train my eyes to see it. I had West African friends in college who did not differentiate red from orange - they just couldn't see it. That's how much language and culture can literally shape our brains, and why we need to try and be flexible

    • @WILLYNOTWALLY
      @WILLYNOTWALLY Před 3 měsíci

      Red and yellow and pink and blue, purple and orange and green.

  • @cileft011
    @cileft011 Před 10 měsíci +537

    1:18:26 one of the most obvious criticisms of the koko gorilla experiment is that none of her handlers could actually speak ASL fluently. there's a really insightful article about a fluent ASL speaker who saw koko and it explains how koko's hand signs were often incorrect or vague but her handlers would interpret them as valid anyway. and it also talks about how koko never actually used ASL unprompted. she would use it when answering questions and interacting with trainers, but she wouldn't use it to communicate something she thought of the way a human would.

    • @nadarith1044
      @nadarith1044 Před 9 měsíci +47

      Literally screwed up their 'experiment', the funny thing is there are other experiments of apes actually successfully using ASL (though not to the extent of what koko was claimed to use obviously)

    • @peccantis
      @peccantis Před 9 měsíci +46

      Koko's advocate/main handler also constantly dressed her achievements up. I'd call her Koko's enabler but Koko wasn't really doing anything wrong so it doesn't quite fit...
      Koko signing "water bird" was Koko making up a compound word for waterfowl, not Koko making two circumstantially relevant separate signs for water and a bird that happened to be in the water.
      Koko signing incorrectly in response to prompts was Koko lying or joking, or getting confused between signs whose spoken English equivalents happen to *sound* similar.

    • @accelerationquanta5816
      @accelerationquanta5816 Před 9 měsíci

      @@peccantis There is no such thing as "doing anything wrong". All actions are equally justified.

    • @LordMarcus
      @LordMarcus Před 9 měsíci +27

      ​@@accelerationquanta5816What are you adding to the conversation, here?

    • @ImSidgr
      @ImSidgr Před 9 měsíci

      @@accelerationquanta5816🤔

  • @lanyuncong1676
    @lanyuncong1676 Před 10 měsíci +324

    Biang is also a very unique Chinese character that is almost meme-worthy in my opinion. Biang is a made up character. Yes technically all words and characters are "made up" but Biang is especially so. It's not really even a real official Chinese character. It is not possible to type it out on many digital devices, and its not included in most modern dictionaries either.
    For most of the Chinese language, one singular pronunciation can correspond to dozens of characters (涯/牙/芽 are all pronounced "ya" and with the same tone), but there is only one word in the entire Chinese language that is pronounced Biang. Also, most Chinese characters also have multiple meanings depending on the context and what other characters they are paired with, but Biang has one and ONLY one meaning, that is Biang Biang Noodles.
    And and and, the structure of Biang as a Chinese character doesn't even make sense! If you know Chinese you would know that each character is made up of multiple components that hint towards either the meaning or pronunciation of the character. Biang has tons of components, none of which allude to its meaning as a type of noodle nor as an onomatopoeia. Food usually has the component 饣(飠), or 口 for a sound word. Biang has neither of those. There are explanations trying to reason the structure of the character as an allusion to a person selling goods out of a cart but I personally feel like that's a bit far fetched.
    What I am trying to say is that Biang is a highly artificial character that has absolutely no buisness being so complex. My headcanon is that Biang was created as a marketing strategy by noodle sellers back in the olden days, it was purposely made to look as complicated as it is to draw attention to it and be memorable. According to this Biang would have most likely been created by merchants rather than educated scholars hence why it does not make a lot of sense linguistically. But it achieved its goal and sure is an unforgettable symbol of good food!
    (If anyone was curious, the Biang Biang noodle is a very wide chewy type of noodle made from wheat with spicy seasoning on top, its pretty good!)

    • @kingarthurthethirdthst3804
      @kingarthurthethirdthst3804 Před 9 měsíci +63

      Big Biang theory

    • @LordMarcus
      @LordMarcus Před 9 měsíci +9

      I'd say it was created to look like what a long noodle or even a pile of noodles would look like if you threw them at a wall and interpreted whatever stuck as a glyph (sorry, can't recall the Chinese word equivalent, and I'm on mobile).

    • @paulkanja
      @paulkanja Před 9 měsíci

      @@kingarthurthethirdthst3804 Big Brain comment

  • @baracuda902
    @baracuda902 Před 6 měsíci +10

    I can’t explain how much joy this brought me, thanks for a great 2 hours, 7 minutes and six seconds of my life

  • @ramlozz8368
    @ramlozz8368 Před 2 měsíci +5

    Duncan good job on your videos man, the amount of work you put on them is crazy this are lectures my friend, I can firmly say that you are about to take off!!

  • @mazzucky4621
    @mazzucky4621 Před 7 měsíci +164

    Him using actual pigeons when saying pidgin, and transforming said pigeon into a different pigeon when pidgin is evolving always gets me.

    • @sme91158
      @sme91158 Před 5 měsíci +13

      What gets me is that he didn't even bother to explain the origin of the word "pidgin" in a video about linguistics! "Pidgin" probably originated from a Chinese attempt at a shortened pronunciation of the phrase "business-language" ("bizin").Instead he keeps showing a picture of a pigeon. Oh well.

  • @Koutouhara
    @Koutouhara Před 10 měsíci +423

    Most of you're examples at 1:05:15 are not actually wasei-eigo but are instead the more general gairaigo (or loanwords), which is why we can understand their meaning when translated or spoken. Things like alcohol [arukooru] are only different because Japanese phonetics doesn't have such equivalents for things that include [L] sounds or consonate clusters. Japanese is more of a syllabic type of language. The way it forms syllables, or mora, are also different from English; since all of them end in a vowel except for ん [n]. Thus, Japanese can only get close approximations for gairaigo for it to be physically and comfortably said in Japanese. Many Japanese people can't even hear the difference between [R] and [L] if asked about it.
    Collaboration [koraboreeshion], hamburger [hanbaagaa], hip-hop [hippuhoppu], keyboard [kiiboodoo], skateboard [sukeetoboodoo], Twitter [tsuittaa], and more that you mentioned are all said this way because of the reasons I mentioned previously, but regardless, are all still /understood/ to mean the same thing in BOTH languages when used.
    _________
    Wasei-eigo however is when gairaigo is taken a step further - when a word from English is used to mean something different in Japanese from what it would originally be understood as in English. Quote "[They] are Japanese-language expressions based on English words, or parts of word combinations, that do not exist in standard English or whose meanings differ from the words from which they were derived." and "Wasei-eigo words [are] compound words and portmanteaus are constructed by Japanese speakers on the basis of loanwords derived from English and embedded into the Japanese lexicon with refashioned, novel meanings diverging significantly from the originals."
    For example, if I were planning to go somewhere with a friend and I said "I'll be the handle keeper" to them in English, they wouldn't know what I meant. Why would I be keeping or watching over a handle? In Japanese ハンドルキーパー [handorukiipaa] is indeed the wasei-eigo that they use for what we would call a "designated driver" and a "handle" is a "steering wheel" but that isn't how we use those words in English.
    Another one would be スキンシップ [sukinshippu] "skinship" (portmanteau of "skin" and "kinship") - this is when you're physically affectionate with close friends and family like hugging one another or a parents holding their baby skin-to-skin after it's born. We just call this being affectionate but if someone asked for or talked about "skinship" to you in English it would normally sound weird. Although, this is the fun part about wasei-eigo, is that after this one caught on and became more popular online, it has actually been used in English now and then for the meaning of skin-to-skin contact with another. English has borrowed wasei-eigo words that look English but are entirely novel to Japanese.

    • @seredachan
      @seredachan Před 10 měsíci +21

      oof, awesome comment, thank you for the effort you've put in

    • @Koutouhara
      @Koutouhara Před 10 měsíci +18

      @@seredachan thank you for reading 🙏🏽
      I'm Japanese-American, so I know about nuance in both languages; though admittedly my Japanese could use more work in general 😅

    • @andrzejnawalany198
      @andrzejnawalany198 Před 10 měsíci +15

      My thoughts exactly, thanks for bringing this up. Most of examples given under this entry are indeed garaigo. Real wasei-eigo is way more interesting. It makes me wander if there are similar cases in other languages. I feel like there must be.

    • @SimonRGates
      @SimonRGates Před 10 měsíci +17

      マンション for apartment buildings was the one I came across first. Confusing because it's in the same area, but not quite right. アルバイト is similar, confusing for an English speaker until you remember that load words can come from other languages, and also doesn't quite mean what it means in German.

    • @GTaichou
      @GTaichou Před 10 měsíci +12

      I wonder if "Viking Lunch" (buffet-style meal) is wasei-eigo too? It always tickled me to see it advertised in Tokyo.

  • @tmrb7600
    @tmrb7600 Před 3 dny

    Awesome video! Thanks for all the hard work that went into this explanation!

  • @labronjenkins462
    @labronjenkins462 Před 5 měsíci +2

    This channel is among the best on CZcams without a doubt, and the level of research and explanation is superb. I would add only one thought, that the statement by Chomsky that "colorless green ideas sleep furiously" makes perfect sense as a metaphor when the superposition aspect of quantum mechanics is borne in mind, another example of the wonderful flexibility of our language. Wonderful video, outstanding channel.

  • @marljusweety
    @marljusweety Před 9 měsíci +594

    I love how the comment section feels like additional content, like a bonus feature on a dvd. 😅 Thank you to all who have gone in depth on topics from the video, added info or given further insight or different perspectives. I am fascinated and have learned a lot!

    • @AfrikanMan
      @AfrikanMan Před 8 měsíci +2

      Haha... It for sure is like further documentation

  • @siregne4343
    @siregne4343 Před 10 měsíci +57

    As a native Russian speaker, my mind was kinda blown up when I watched the "Russian Blue" entry. It kinda explains the struggle when I was first learning colors in English and trying to translate them into Russian. When I see something described as blue in English, I almost never have the idea if that color is the light blue shade or the darker shade, because of my perception of colours and how I grew up with it. Other than that, that was a really interesting iceberg.

  • @HyperSquid1234
    @HyperSquid1234 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Easily the greatest iceberg out there, very well done and thank you!

  • @alex0508bass
    @alex0508bass Před 5 měsíci +2

    What a video! Thanks a lot for putting in the work!

  • @periwinkleadidas
    @periwinkleadidas Před 9 měsíci +788

    the section of untranslatable words was really eye opening about how we accidentally make other parts of the world way more exotic than they actually are through their language only. Super super reflective, thank you Duncan
    edit - sept 1, 2023: i appreciate yall and the discussion in the replies, i’m not much of a linguist but cultural priorities and values DO shine through in language, sorry to give this page too much credit for a concept i didn’t fully understand :)

    • @Gamesaucer
      @Gamesaucer Před 9 měsíci +65

      It's simply wrong, though. It wildly mischaracterises Pullum's response.
      Pullum's response only addressed the idea that untranslatable words inherently say something about our priorities. He does not contest that untranslatable words exist in this response, nor that they _can_ reflect our priorities.
      For example, "seppuku" in Japanese comes with connotations that equivalents in other languages don't have. The priorities it indicates are no longer relevant, but it is still a word that exists in the way it does by virtue of Japanese culture of the past.
      And often, loan words reflect someone else's priorities. Take "Siesta". In English, it describes a foreign cultural phenomenon. To suggest that the existence of the word "siesta" in English says nothing about Mediterranean culture is patently absurd. But in Spanish, it mostly just means "nap". This way of borrowing words is incredibly common cross-linguistically.
      However, what we should be careful with is characteristing words/phrases like "fernweh", "umami" or "l'appel du vide" as saying something about the culture from which they originate. They very much do not. They're just fairly lyrical descriptions of the ideas they communicate, and/or just exotic by virtue of being foreign. Whatever the reason might be that we use them, it is certainly not because they describe a cultural phenomenon.
      How do you tell the difference? That's straight-forward: by actually looking at the culture in question. The words themselves however, are just words; which is all that Pullum's response really means. We should characterise words by the culture that uses them, not the other way around.

    • @McSlobo
      @McSlobo Před 9 měsíci +18

      You can certainly always translate but sometimes it is particularly difficult to get all the meanings and tones into a compact package without having the whole context included.

    • @VDNKh_
      @VDNKh_ Před 9 měsíci +1

      I'll bet the speakers of Piraha must have been blown away by the concept of counting things.

    • @matiascorrea2545
      @matiascorrea2545 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Try translating "wea" from Chilean. I don't think it has a correct translation (you can use synonyms for specific contexts, but this word changes its meaning depending on the context)

    • @melaniey.5596
      @melaniey.5596 Před 9 měsíci +4

      ⁠@@matiascorrea2545what do you mean man, Chilean isn’t even a language. If you mean you can’t translate slang, that’s another argument altogether.

  • @PiousMoltar
    @PiousMoltar Před 9 měsíci +871

    As someone who did French for a few years at high school, oiseaux honestly looks to be spelt exactly how it sounds.

    • @catarinaduarte7773
      @catarinaduarte7773 Před 8 měsíci +38

      Exactly

    • @hazeyhay4864
      @hazeyhay4864 Před 8 měsíci +17

      I was thinking the same haha

    • @MP-cv6if
      @MP-cv6if Před 8 měsíci +3

      Ikr

    • @kaiserchief9319
      @kaiserchief9319 Před 8 měsíci +64

      He made a bit of a bias pronunciation and I say this because if he were looking at a French phonemic chart, none of this would be out of the ordinary. It's only strange for him because he's pronouncing it from an English perspective. In French Oi = wa = s=z = eaux = o wazo. Des oiseaux. Des Wazo.

    • @SWAGLOADER9000
      @SWAGLOADER9000 Před 8 měsíci +47

      @@Ashley24306 French is mostly consistant with it's own rules of pronunciation - whereas english is a bit of a mishmash of rules and you kind of just need to brute force learn the individual words.

  • @mauri3853
    @mauri3853 Před 5 měsíci +1

    i really appreciate all the efforts to make such great informative and entertaining video

  • @user-fn4tu4nc3b
    @user-fn4tu4nc3b Před 5 měsíci +3

    thank you, dude! I really enjoy this video

  • @Kairong05
    @Kairong05 Před 10 měsíci +184

    13:02 I hate to be the akshully 🤓👆guy, but actually German words can be infinitely long, because you can simply come up with new correct words by combining nouns as long as the new word makes sense. The same is true for Dutch, a language closely related to German. It’s just that “Rindfleischetikettierungsüberwachungsaufgabenübertragungsgesetz” is the longest word in German dictionaries.

    • @ronald3836
      @ronald3836 Před 10 měsíci +11

      A typical Dutch word is kattenbakkorreltjesfabrieksterreinverlichtingschakelbordenverkoperaktentasontwerpersopleidingsinstituutsdirecteursalarisonderhandelingsgesprekpartners.

    • @h0rn3d_h1st0r1an
      @h0rn3d_h1st0r1an Před 10 měsíci

      @@ronald3836what

    • @Borimira
      @Borimira Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@ronald3836 😧😬🤣 English translation, please? ))

    • @56independent42
      @56independent42 Před 10 měsíci +22

      @@Borimira I can't translate it, but it seems to be similar to how english allows word-creation-dash-using-multiword-words-with-no-end-in-sight-on-and-on-forever

    • @tinfoilhomer909
      @tinfoilhomer909 Před 10 měsíci +4

      @@Borimira It's a job description.

  • @elizabethgundrum2619
    @elizabethgundrum2619 Před 10 měsíci +138

    The census also doesn't necessarily cover a circumstance like a Spanish professor I had. Her father was a first gen. Mexican immigrant who had met his wife while serving in West Germany. Their common language was English, so their children mostly spoke English at home and school, but learned German from their mother and Mexican Spanish from their father. Neither parent ever learned the others' native language with any fluency.

    • @Vhvjdow0ajsbcdhcuei3o22-om4sm
      @Vhvjdow0ajsbcdhcuei3o22-om4sm Před 10 měsíci +7

      Your native language also dictates your aptitude to other languages. German, english, spanish are relatively similar, they share letters vocabulary words, and the way ideas are presented arent alien to one anorher, but if an english speaker were to learn chinese it would need a structured learning method. My mother is chinese and speaks 4 dialects, but i never picked up fluency until i studied it in school. Some languages are just plain harder to learn than others

    • @puellanivis
      @puellanivis Před 9 měsíci +2

      Eh… in this case the census would cover it. “Does this person speak a language other than English at home?” Yes. All of them do, but slightly different language sets, which is then indicated on the census.

  • @GoodlyRogue
    @GoodlyRogue Před 5 měsíci +1

    What a fascinating video. I thought that each entry was interesting. Thanks a lot!

  • @MrStarnerd
    @MrStarnerd Před 5 měsíci +6

    Bro you’re a legend, best video of the year for me.

  • @scentedsin
    @scentedsin Před 8 měsíci +716

    We want Sociology, Economics, Psychology & Art-history icebergs too. You're the only one on CZcams who gives me hope on these. Please do them. Would be immensely appreciated by me and certainly by the rest on CZcams, like the Philosophy & Linguistics icebergs were ♥

    • @kjokhlkol1115
      @kjokhlkol1115 Před 8 měsíci +3

      But seems to be much work.

    • @lsddreamemulator
      @lsddreamemulator Před 7 měsíci +2

      Yeah!

    • @enesbatuhan7833
      @enesbatuhan7833 Před 7 měsíci +32

      you just assigned this man enough work for his entire life

    • @ZM-dm3jg
      @ZM-dm3jg Před 7 měsíci +1

      If you want the psychology iceberg, read Nietzsche and Carl Jung

    • @bolivia.j
      @bolivia.j Před 7 měsíci

      You should watch wndigoon! The man is awesome and puts so much work into his content

  • @azurecat5887
    @azurecat5887 Před 10 měsíci +221

    Props in making a 2 hour video not only informative, but also entertaining. Keep up the good stuff!

    • @hhoopplaa
      @hhoopplaa Před 9 měsíci +1

      but especially informative! I was unsure at first, sometimes people don't explain the stuff on the iceberg very well. he doesn't seem to be someone who was exposed to too much culture and language from all over the world and mostly confined in USA (example: for me as someone speaking German I'm not sure if he can't pronounce the "r" in "Bär" or why he said it almost exactly like the English "bear") but he's doing a really good job (much better than if I did probably, anyway)

    • @shingibanggibboongbbongbanggi
      @shingibanggibboongbbongbanggi Před 8 měsíci

      honestly it’s kinda of misinformation considering all words/languages he gives examples of aren’t pronounced correctly😭

    • @kekekessa
      @kekekessa Před 8 měsíci

      2 hour video with mistakes already in the first 5 minutes. Rather seems like the concepts talked about are not really thought through, just compiled in their most popular forms no matter how (in)correct they are.

    • @hhoopplaa
      @hhoopplaa Před 8 měsíci

      @@kekekessa Can I ask what exactly is wrong? Whether it be at the beginning or anywhere else, genuinely curious

    • @kekekessa
      @kekekessa Před 8 měsíci

      @@hhoopplaa Hi, I stopped watching at the American monolingualism part, but some notes before that: French is definitely not the only language with silent letters, i.e. English has plenty of those as well. Omelette du fromage does not mean cheese omelette, instead omelette au fromage does. The hardest and easiest languages is heavily toward native English speakers, and setting an amount of weeks for learning them is sketchy at best, it takes years to master any language depending on study time, environment and learning capabilities. Sure, the video would probably be double the length if he discussed these items thoroughly but wouldn't that kind of be the point :)

  • @carolmartin1298
    @carolmartin1298 Před 2 měsíci +3

    Dang...that was incredibly interesting. Awesome video!

  • @ashkanbagherzadeh8686
    @ashkanbagherzadeh8686 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Every single moment of this 2-hour video is worth watching. Thanks

  • @carlomartello5418
    @carlomartello5418 Před 10 měsíci +465

    I don't know if someone has already written it or not, but actually there are some sentences that have meaning in two languages but it is completly different depending on the language you read the sentence with. In Italian for example the sentence "I vitelli dei Romani sono belli" means "Romans' calves are beautiful", but the same sentence in Latin means "Go, o Vitellius, at the war signal of the Roman god". I find it pretty interesting and also a bit strange considering how similar Italian and Latin should be. I don't know if there are similar sentences in other languages though.

    • @alunatic4989
      @alunatic4989 Před 10 měsíci +15

      ooh thats a great one

    • @rafaelarevalo8047
      @rafaelarevalo8047 Před 10 měsíci +6

      wow that's a fantastic example. thank you for sharing

    • @AverageREnjoyer
      @AverageREnjoyer Před 10 měsíci +13

      The thing with Latin as we know and teach it now is that it was slightly changed from the "original" Latin. So actually, if we were to compare Italian and the "original" Latin, there would be less similarities. And we also don't really know what it sounded like, but it is believed it sounded more like a "crude" Romanian.

    • @jimpatras4255
      @jimpatras4255 Před 10 měsíci +15

      The meaning of words often change over time. The linguistic term for this phenomena is 'semantic drift'. Italian has had a long time to drift away from Latin.
      For example the word we know as 'silly' meant 'Holy' in 14th century English. It was related to the to the Germán word selig, which meant 'blessed ' or 'holy' back in the time, but now usually means happy in 21st century German.

    • @TheDavidlloydjones
      @TheDavidlloydjones Před 10 měsíci +3

      I think your Italian/Roman exampole is bogus. Somebody's having you on.
      Doesn't the sentence have both meanings in both languages depending on how you punctuate it vocally?

  • @megamihestia4049
    @megamihestia4049 Před 7 měsíci +366

    Personally I found the most iconic example with regards to Japanese borrowing words from other language is the word karaoke. It is an English word adapted from Japanese, which itself is a combination of Japanese and borrowed English word abbriviated. The Japanese word is actually two words combined. Kara, a Japanese word meaning empty, and oke, an abbriviated form of ochestra. Put together, it means an empty ochestra, which is conceptually what karaoke is, someone singing along with an empty band playing music for them.

    • @nenonone791
      @nenonone791 Před 7 měsíci +1

      do you live in boston

    • @iandaroyal770
      @iandaroyal770 Před 5 měsíci +2

      ​@@nenonone791do you live in Boston?

    • @jan_Eten
      @jan_Eten Před 5 měsíci +2

      空 can also mean sky, as in 空色, meaning sky blue (lit. sky color)

  • @runawaylostmymind
    @runawaylostmymind Před 5 měsíci

    This things in this video are almost all I think about, everyday, for as long as I can remember. I LOVE THIS. 🙏🏻 THANK YOU!

  • @CrochetLover85
    @CrochetLover85 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I love this video, and happily watched to the end. New sub ❤

  • @marreco6347
    @marreco6347 Před 7 měsíci +98

    Three incredible things about Piraha you didn't mention:
    -They don't have connectives. They connect different phrases. Phrases are connected by context. Everything I said is a rough emulation of how Piraha speak.
    -They use the same words to describe relevance, distance or time. A distant place can be somewhere that no longer exists, that doesn't matter or is far away.
    -They have a whole vocabulary that allows them to speak while eating and another to communicate with whistles, so they can communicate while hunting.

    • @mito88
      @mito88 Před 7 měsíci +5

      pirahã

    • @da3musceteers
      @da3musceteers Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@mito88grammar nazi

    • @m.i.c.h.o
      @m.i.c.h.o Před 2 měsíci +1

      That's so cool. Thanks for sharing

    • @Tony32
      @Tony32 Před 2 měsíci +3

      You forgot to mention this is important because it flies in the face of Chomsky's universal grammar hypothesis.
      I think this is the reason why pirahã is in this iceberg.

  • @phsmanta
    @phsmanta Před 10 měsíci +129

    55:00
    While it's true that Grzegorz Brz(ęczyszczykiewicz) is a meme about how difficult it is to pronounce polish names the story behind it's origin is much more interesting. It originates from a cult classic polish movie "How I Unleashed World War II" where the main character is captured and interrogated by german officers. The movie is more than 50 years old but it legacy continues, and that scene along with many others became part of polish culture.

    • @intellectually_lazy
      @intellectually_lazy Před 10 měsíci +2

      i heard of something that sounds like jabilski's star but it's spelled prz...etc. mind blown!

    • @Annathroy
      @Annathroy Před 10 měsíci +11

      For native slavic speakers like myself, a Croat, it is super easy to pronounce but almost impossible to write down. I always thought that was the joke

    • @SinfulKaptur
      @SinfulKaptur Před 10 měsíci +9

      ​@@Annathroy The real and hard to speak (for foreginers) and write (also for native poles) is last name "Gżegżółka". It is because is has two "ż" and "ó" letters, which occur sometimes as "rz" and "u". We have some spelling rules about these letters, but more often we write intuitively.
      "Gżegżółka" is funny because in polish web-culture we have story about teenager who was arrested for laughing at a cop who didn't know how to spell it.

    • @TooGumbica
      @TooGumbica Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@SinfulKaptur Idk, I'm also a croat and our writing-saying is 99.9% the same. I think when u learn how to read polish it's izi but, I'm not PL idk. Those names would be very izi to write when u hear them and to read if u know cro alphabet (Ečišćikijević - following ije rule and čć rule, and Gžegžolka- not south slavic but its a nice sounding)

    • @Artur_M.
      @Artur_M. Před 10 měsíci +7

      Polish spelling might look confusing and intimidating for English speakers but is actually much more consistent than English spelling. Here's a video in which an Australian guy explains basically everything about both Czech and Polish spelling in just 10 minutes:
      czcams.com/video/roh14dzDm6E/video.html
      Fun fact: that Voynich fellow, after whom the Voynich Manuscript is named, was Polish and his surname was originally spelt Wojnicz. He changed the spelling after moving to Britain.
      Fun fact 2: the whole Grzegorz Brzęczyszczykiewicz scene was inspired by a novel that was later adapted into another cult classic Polish comedy - "C.K. Dezerterzy."

  • @raichu56k
    @raichu56k Před 3 měsíci +3

    masterpiece of a video, hats off to you

  • @amberrlynch
    @amberrlynch Před 19 dny

    just graduated with a BA in Linguistics and Anthropology, and i’m starting a MA in Applied Ling in the fall. this video was SO interesting, i’d heard of some of these in class but i have so many more rabbit holes and research ideas now!

  • @nootics
    @nootics Před 10 měsíci +16

    1:15:34 the phrase "brain damage" in the context of acquiring a "french" accent from an accident is hilarious for some reason

  • @cinaedus8781
    @cinaedus8781 Před 10 měsíci +58

    A note on "English is a pidgin," there's actually a third option:
    Before the Norman conquest, there was the Danelaw. During this time older Anglo-Saxons lived next to Danish newcomers, and their languages were a lot more similar than modern Danish and English. Although we have very little writing evidence of common speech at the time, the hypothesis goes that the two peoples, who shared a lot of vocabulary but slightly different inflections and grammar, simply dropped a lot of inflections to make communication easier, and that this is the reason why English remains a language that is incredibly light on inflection, even compared to its Germanic relatives. English would thus be a creole descended from this Dane-Anglo pidgin.

    • @Zapatero078
      @Zapatero078 Před 10 měsíci

      Inglés es una lengua barbara de los salvajes

    • @lucasrfma
      @lucasrfma Před 9 měsíci +1

      it's probably a pidgin in all ways it can be lol. On that same segment, Duncan says that "Against all odds, English with its wealth of exceptions, bizarre characteristics and frankly weird sound it has become the great equalizer". Well, I'd say it is precisely because of those characteristics. It is an amalgamation of multiple languages, resulting in various exceptions and weirdness, but it is also *very similar* to other languages (well, mostly European). Like in the "easy to learn" chart, there are languages like Portuguese, French, Spanish... as well as Dutch in tier 1. I'm Brazilian, and I think that starting from a strictly Portuguese baseline, Spanish and Italian would probably be a tier 0.3 compared to that chart, French 0.6 perhaps, while Dutch a tier 3. In other words, English brings it all together.
      You can also see it in the way English is much more respectful of word origins than Portuguese is (and probably other languages are). Loan words in Portuguese tend to be deformed to conform with our language, while English doesn't do that as much (well, modern br portuguese is more like English in this aspect, and words such as "layout" are generally used as-is, but sometimes I find it being deformed into "leiaute" in formal texts). The plural thing is an example, here we just use -s for everything, while in at least some cases English keeps the original way. Brazilians also conjugate imported verbs as a first conjugation Portuguese verb (-ar) (to hit becomes hitar), applying our grammar to foreign words. Meanwhile, English seems to have gotten rid of much of its original grammar, since it doesn't have much of the grammar Dutch or German present...When you think of the "pidgin" section of the video that describes how "pidgins" use words from both original languages while disregarding both languages grammar, it all fits.

  • @Lyna-23
    @Lyna-23 Před 2 měsíci +10

    As a language sciences and linguistics master student who speaks four languages I'm familiar with most of these concepts, but I enjoyed watching this. Great job putting all that together. I hope you will make another video that encompasses all linguistics theories.

  • @jarnokorhonen900
    @jarnokorhonen900 Před 2 měsíci +3

    41:24 (Bear-stuff)
    Well, this is quite interesting because we had a similar practice here in Finland in the not-so-distant past. For example there were beliefs that bears are related to humans or have been humans before or are half-human etc (because of some human-like mannerisms and stuff like that). Using the actual word for bear (karhu) was somewhat of a taboo so there was a bunch of different names and some of them are still sometimes used. I don't really know when this practice faded away but I have an ancestor who was the most accomplished bear hunter in Finland and the euphemisms were still used during his lifetime in the late 18th- early 19th century.

  • @sithisrants4154
    @sithisrants4154 Před 7 měsíci +685

    A lot of the words you used as examples of 和製英語 (wasei eigo) at around 1:05:00 are actually just 外来語 (gairaigo) or loan words. Wasei-eigo, or "Japan-derived English" refers specifically to words and phrases specific to Japan that use English as a base.
    アメリカンドッグ (Amerikan doggu) is Wasei eigo because no one calls a corn dog an American dog outside of Japan
    スケートボード (Sukeetoboodo) is not because it's just a Japanese transliteration of the word Skateboard.
    パワハラ (pawa hara) is a good one. "Power-harassment" is when you abuse your authority over someone as their boss/parent, etc.

    • @benginaldclocker2891
      @benginaldclocker2891 Před 7 měsíci +4

      someone needs to bring this up

    • @nhpivotlk
      @nhpivotlk Před 6 měsíci +15

      @@benginaldclocker2891he technically did

    • @aevstiel
      @aevstiel Před 6 měsíci +2

      and alcohol is an arabic word not english

    • @WiggaMachiavelli
      @WiggaMachiavelli Před 6 měsíci

      @@aevstiel And of course the Japanese borrowed it directly from the Arabs, right? You twit.

    • @genie3531
      @genie3531 Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@aevstielnot really, we took the inspiration from it for sure but it’s not spelled the same nor does it have the same meaning

  • @Frahamen
    @Frahamen Před 10 měsíci +83

    So the real insight you can find in the "untranslatable" words is that words in different language rarely one on one translate; but that there's usually some slight nuance in meaning. Sure you can make it sound profound by overdiscribing the differences, but what you really need to know is that translating a sentence is a lot more an art than a mathematical function.

  • @antonioc3995
    @antonioc3995 Před měsícem +1

    Love this stuff !

  • @kawumbakawumba2782
    @kawumbakawumba2782 Před 6 měsíci

    I just watched this through, great video, man!

  • @alexdyk9813
    @alexdyk9813 Před 10 měsíci +272

    Another iceberg can be formed from the Chinese sentence "shi shi shi shi shi施氏食石狮". This sentence is written in Chinese characters and read in Mandarin Chinese. However, when read in Cantonese, it is sounds like "see sea sek sek see"; when read in Hokkien, it sounds like "see see jiak sik sai". when read in Hakka it sounds like “she shi sit sak su“. Cantonese, Hokkien (called Southern Min in the video, the part on "tea/chai"), Hakka and Mandarin are all varieties of Chinese.
    However, there's been a debate on what to call all those different types of Chinese varieties: are they "dialects" of Chinese or "language"? When we speak of "dialects" of a language, for example "dialects of English", it is understood that they are regional speech patterns of English (i.e. accents and pronunciations), however the differences do not impede the understanding between the speakers. Here's a further example: London Cockney, General London, Northern English, Scottish English, New York English, Philly English, Southern Appalachian, West Coast English, Standard Canadian English, General Australian English, NZ English are all dialects of English. An Aussie can understand a Californian, or a West Virginian's speech can be understood by a Scot with little to no problem etc.
    If we apply the same definition to regional speech across China, a problem soon becomes obvious. If you have a Mandarin speaker, Cantonese speaker, Hokkien speaker and Hakka speaker talk to each other using only their regional speech, they can't understand each other. Suppose all of them are well literate in written Chinese, there's a high change that they are able to exchange ideas using written words. Meaning that if they all write in Chinese, they can understand each other. Yet, this situation can only be possible if all of them write in Standard Chinese. If they write in their written regional varieties, i.e. a Cantonese speaker writes in written Cantonese; Hokkien speaker writes in written Hokkien; Hakka speaker writes in written Hakka, they may find exchanging ideas through text a bit difficult.
    That brings us to diglossia. The phenomenon where a language has a "high" and "low" type, that "high" is the standardised language which is mostly reserved for formal situations, which is generally understood by every speaker of that language. However, outside of the formal situations, a speaker of that language uses the "low" type to communicate with "low type" speakers of the same. Like all thing linguistics, not all "low types" are the same. "Low type" A speakers may not understand "low type" B speakers; if there's "low type" C speakers they may not understand "low type" A or "B". Besides Chinese, diglossia is also found in Arabic and Malay to name a few.

    • @gtc239
      @gtc239 Před 10 měsíci +30

      It's not that complicated, if we remove the political narrative then Mandarin, Hakka, Cantonese, and Hokkien are actually seperate languages within the Sinitic branch of Sino-Tibetan linguistically, in fact Hokkien is speculated to have split from Old Chinese whereas the rest such as Cantonese and Mandarin diverged after Middle Chinese, but Politics always skew things up to promote a united centralised state and try to undermine the spoken variaties of Chinese as a mere "dialects", it's sad but it's true.

    • @gtc239
      @gtc239 Před 10 měsíci +13

      And to add up to certain things, even certain Mandarin dialects aren't intelligible to each other, we're not talking about Hokkien vs Mandarin here, but ""Dialects"" within the Mandarin branch, some even classify Mandarin not as a unified language but seperate languages within the "Mandarin group", yeah it's confusing.

    • @MerlinJuergens
      @MerlinJuergens Před 10 měsíci +19

      You don't have to go to Chinese for that. English is actually an exception, for having their dialects being so similar.
      In Germany we obviously all speak High German. But if someone who only speaks High German speaks to someone who only speaks Lower German (Plattdeutsch) He won't understand a thing. Same with people speaking Bavarian dialects.
      Its not just Accent and Pronounciation, its entirely different words, but still kinda the same language and same script. Kinda like you described with Chinese...

    • @alwjpg
      @alwjpg Před 10 měsíci +7

      @@gtc239​​​​⁠​​⁠​⁠it’s not that simple either. even if you’re attempting to remove the political narrative (and i’d argue you can’t, given that language is inherently political), there’s still the question of how you’re defining dialect and language. regarding dialect alone, there seems to exist multiple meanings, eg. dialect as a pejorative, similarly to how you seem to be using it vs. dialect simply describing a particular form of spoken language

    • @Killerbee_McTitties
      @Killerbee_McTitties Před 10 měsíci +10

      ​@@alwjpgI'd definitely argue against language being inherently political, but it would be useful to know your definition of political.
      Also the evaluative dimension of dialect i.e. dialect as a pejorative, is more connected to the broader speech act the word is embedded in rather than the word itself.

  • @kylespevak6781
    @kylespevak6781 Před 10 měsíci +213

    It's funny how people tend to think other languages are more mystical than theirs because they don't have the outside perspective on their own language. I'm slightly bilingual with Japanese and there are some thoughts and ideas that are conveyed entirely differently depending on the language. Sometimes you need a whole long phrase in English to say something small in Japanese or vice versa.

    • @Vitorruy1
      @Vitorruy1 Před 10 měsíci +14

      I feel all languages have the same ideas. I can use "ser" and "estar" in English just fine using expressions like "looks like", but having those ideas baked into the grammar and used as a foundation rather than a byproduct confuses people.

    • @edwardelric5019
      @edwardelric5019 Před 10 měsíci +7

      As a translation student I face these problems constantly 😂

    • @prkp7248
      @prkp7248 Před 10 měsíci +5

      Some language are short, some are long. My native language is polish and correct version of Polish mostly is much longer in giving the same information (correct as in not contaminated with English words and Abbreviations). Of course sometimes you can say more in one word, thanks to declination, but damn, it's hard to speak anything resembling polish in small number of short words in messages between people.

    • @labellafleur6262
      @labellafleur6262 Před 10 měsíci +2

      My favorites are natsukashi and shoganai

    • @blugreen99
      @blugreen99 Před 10 měsíci

      Saganaki=greek/japanese cheese?

  • @natyboops
    @natyboops Před 5 měsíci +2

    The information about Toki Pona gave me goosebumps. I created a symbolic visual language during a period of depression too. It's also very simple, and very philosophical.

  • @user-wd5ly1ut3b
    @user-wd5ly1ut3b Před měsícem

    Great work, thank you so much

  • @carsland123
    @carsland123 Před 10 měsíci +44

    Dang this was such a niche yet in depth iceberg video. This is probably one of the most interesting ones I've seen and I thoroughly enjoyed the watch!

  • @bobtheduck
    @bobtheduck Před 10 měsíci +163

    Hamburgers were not invented in Hamburg, but the practice of using ground beef as a meal center was known as "Hamburg steak" (changed to "Salisbury Steak" I think around WWI because, you know, Germany were the bad guys) and that's the dish that was imported from Hamburg (though it's unlikely that this was the first time a culture used ground beef). The "Hamburger" was a sandwich made with this "Hamburg Steak" and was created first in Wisconsin.

    • @intellectually_lazy
      @intellectually_lazy Před 10 měsíci +7

      you just made me hungry

    • @owenswabi
      @owenswabi Před 10 měsíci +18

      Everyone knows it was actually invented millennia ago by the great Serb empire, named pljeskavica

    • @LuKing2
      @LuKing2 Před 10 měsíci +10

      ​@@owenswabiserbs are cringe

    • @vke6077
      @vke6077 Před 10 měsíci +7

      @@owenswabi Serbians of course also created gunpowder, the Internet, and so on

    • @oyungogdfrust4136
      @oyungogdfrust4136 Před 10 měsíci +2

      the hamburger patty is a derivation of a meatball, which was invented in persia

  • @mentalplayground
    @mentalplayground Před 4 měsíci

    Fascinating video. Thank You

  • @echoalexis5141
    @echoalexis5141 Před 5 měsíci

    I like this channel because every video is interesting enough that I like listening to it while I get ready for and go to bed, and mellow enough that they continue to he pleasant background noise until I wake up without being disrupting

  • @Blueyzachary
    @Blueyzachary Před 10 měsíci +86

    I think the shades of blue thing applies to me. When I was a kid, I had the light blue ikea cup, and my brother had the blue one. That way, we wouldn’t drink from each other’s cups. I thought “lightblue” was its own color for a LONG time. Even now, I catch myself forgetting that blue includes light blue when people are talking about blue things.

    • @jayhache5609
      @jayhache5609 Před 10 měsíci +6

      The funny thing is that the word “blue” actually does mean what we call light blue. The word “indigo” means what we call dark blue, but most of us have forgotten seventh grade science class that explained the color spectrum… ROYGBIV! ; )

    • @DavidSmith-vr1nb
      @DavidSmith-vr1nb Před 10 měsíci +6

      ​@@jayhache5609 Colour theorists are going to jump in and tell you that Indigo isn't a real colour.

    • @freneticness6927
      @freneticness6927 Před 9 měsíci

      Well if it has the word blue in it that would indicate it is in fact blue.

    • @jayhache5609
      @jayhache5609 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@freneticness6927 His brother probably had an indigo-colored cup, but most English speakers wouldn’t know that. Let’s just use one word for two colors, instead!

    • @freneticness6927
      @freneticness6927 Před 9 měsíci +4

      ​@@jayhache5609 Well if you mix white with blue you get light blue. And indigo is more purple. Like how the seven colours of the rainbow were purple and indigo due to 6 being the devils number. And the ikea cap is actually light blue. But every shade and mixture has their own name but there are certain main ones. The 6 ones aswell as brown and black with brown being a kind of black. Which is why people with black hair are often described as having brown hair. But the light blonde is really just very light brown which becomes like yellow the pigment in the hair. Caritin in hair turns it red.

  • @JovanDacic
    @JovanDacic Před 10 měsíci +151

    The last idea, sleep learning, was in Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World" as "hypnopaedia". And the Welsh Native Americans figure tangentially in Madeleine L'Engle's "A Swiftly Tilting Planet". What a lovely trip down a literary and linguistic memory lane.

    • @Nous520
      @Nous520 Před 10 měsíci +5

      “Hypnopaedia” would translate to sleeping children - it’s interesting he would name it that…

    • @zzzyyyxxx
      @zzzyyyxxx Před 10 měsíci +4

      If you lucid dream, you can in fact learn in your sleep. There was a study done with a professional basketball player who would practice shooting while lucid dreaming and he actually got better due to that.

    • @JovanDacic
      @JovanDacic Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@Nous520 I think Huxley meant it to be derived from the Greek "paideia", which is still rooted in "pais" or "paidos" (child), and pertains to child education.

    • @Nous520
      @Nous520 Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@JovanDacic yes it conjured the image of zombie citizens -having the freedoms and access to knowledge of a child.
      Big brother being the watchful eye of the Father State.

    • @DannyGruesome
      @DannyGruesome Před 10 měsíci

      Theres so many L's in your comment

  • @potmki6601
    @potmki6601 Před 22 hodinami

    Thank you, it was very interesting

  • @lilithFGC
    @lilithFGC Před měsícem +2

    I never thought I’d see jerma an hour into a linguistics video

  • @TheAkumaChan
    @TheAkumaChan Před 8 měsíci +203

    I find meme culture very interestingly different in Mandarin and English. English memes are generally very literal, such as "Everything is fine", "bombastic side eye" or it is just a new made up word such as "rizz". In stark comparison are the metaphorical chinese memes such as "Melon eating audience" (people watching a show or fight from the sidelines), "diving" (lurking in a chat", "big pig trotters" (men who are unreliable romatically). Even though I am a more fluent English speaker, I find myself funnier when I'm speaking Mandarin, whipping out all the internet meme metaphors.

    • @wilburdemitel8468
      @wilburdemitel8468 Před 8 měsíci +12

      ok

    • @m.ceniza4688
      @m.ceniza4688 Před 8 měsíci +5

      Lol big pig trotters where does that come from?

    • @Jiglias
      @Jiglias Před 8 měsíci +31

      rizz is thought to be a shortening of the word 'charisma'.

    • @johnokumu9069
      @johnokumu9069 Před 7 měsíci +3

      ... thank novelty for that... and may want to avoid killing it with a nuanced understanding of individualistic vs collective cultures.

    • @kisnagy2467
      @kisnagy2467 Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@m.ceniza4688 there’s a term referring big liars as big asshole coz the sound resembles each other: big liar is da-piàn-zi and big asshole in northeastern dialect is da-pì-yǎn-zi. And a video of a girl from northeastern China was complaining abt her cheating boyfriend using the dialect went viral, in the video she use big pig trotters (da-zhu-tí-zi) to rhyme with big asshole/big liar (da-pi-yǎn-zi). And soon the nations knows what to call a cheating guy.

  • @saddasish
    @saddasish Před 10 měsíci +173

    Wasei eigo specifically refer to only the pseudo-anglicisms, not just any loanword taken from English to Japanese. The term translates as "Japanese-made English". "Amerikan doggu", "kanningu", "handoru kiipaa", and "rabuho" are such examples, but "koraboreeshon", "hanbaagaa", "hippu hoppu", and "kiiboodo" are not wasei eigo. Rule of thumb is that if the word originates from English but native English speakers can't derive the meaning even from knowing its etymon, then it's wasei eigo. Many Japanese people are surprised to know that a lot of the wasei eigo aren't used as such in English and won't recognize the actual English translations for them.
    One other note is that it's not just English that Japanese has pseudo-loans for. It also has wasei kango, for words taken from historical Chinese. These ones are basically compound words that look like they were regularly borrowed, but were actually first used in the Japanese language. In some cases, these compound words already existed in historical Chinese but now gained additional meanings in Japanese to represent modern concepts. And a lot of those wasei kango actually get adopted (loaned) into modern Chinese languages, Vietnamese, and Korean. CJKV words such as 世界 'world', 電話 'telephone', and 自然 'nature' owe their modern meanings to Japanese.

    • @leyen7276
      @leyen7276 Před 10 měsíci +3

      For those fellow vietnamese who don’t know hanzi/kanji, the examples are ‘thế giới’, ‘điện thoại’ and ‘tự nhiên’ respectively. Quite interesting how the sounds changed: diānhuà - denwa - denhwa - điện thoại. I think we Vietnamese are missing out a lot of the cultural connections to our East Asian folks due to not being taught hanzi (at least to a superficial reading level, the Korean are at least taught to recognize a few hundreds to thousands of hanja if memory serves me right)

    • @lailedcat
      @lailedcat Před 10 měsíci +7

      Thank you, I was annoyed by this haha. Other examples of wasei eigo are things like ペーパードライバー ‘paper driver’ (a person who has a driver’s license but doesn’t in practice drive at all) and バイキング ‘Viking’ (buffet)
      Things like alcohol and hip hop and keyboard are just loanwords.

    • @fotonapapa
      @fotonapapa Před 10 měsíci +8

      Yah the part about wasei-eigo was quite misleading. テンション下がるー!

    • @DrJamesRogers
      @DrJamesRogers Před 10 měsíci +11

      Actually, pseudo-Anglicisms are a bit different for the Japanese language. These are words that are mistaken to be from English since the vast majority of loanwords in the language come from English. For instance, アンケート (originating from French) for questionnaire and カルテ (originating from German) for medical chart. The overarching term that should be used to describe what this CZcamsr is talking about is 外来語 (literally "words from abroad" but basically means "loanwords"). But you did accurately point out specific wasei-eigo (English made in Japan) and the others are merely 外来語. My favorite is パイプカット (pipe cut) which is actually a term used for vasectomy! Lol. I wrote a short piece in Japan Today about this very topic just last week: From English to Japanese: A word’s journey into another language.

    • @fotonapapa
      @fotonapapa Před 10 měsíci

      @@DrJamesRogers finally an expert on the topic!

  • @user-fj3ej8cn2r
    @user-fj3ej8cn2r Před 4 měsíci

    Broooo I love linguistics so much. I didn’t think anyone was enough of a giant nerd to make an iceberg on it. Thank you thank you thank you!!!!

  • @odryblueburn3899
    @odryblueburn3899 Před 2 měsíci

    Наконец досмотрела. Очень крутой айсберг и хороший разбор:з

  • @stxrryd
    @stxrryd Před 10 měsíci +24

    french has what i would like to call "loaded letters". those silent letters at the end of words are meant to be pronounced at the BEGINNING of the next word, so long as the next word starts with a vowel. moreover, to an american speaker, these letters SEEM useless, but to a french speaker, they DO impact how letters sound. some words may have a lot of "silent letters", but they are inadvertently impacting how the rest of the word is said.
    also "omelette du fromage" is also funny because it's grammatically incorrect. if you want to say "cheese omelette", you say "omelette au fromage"

  • @havedalDK
    @havedalDK Před 10 měsíci +138

    Fun fact about Volapük. The Danish saying for nonsense or "That is greek to me" is also "Volapyk". And it is not just a novelty example. Most Danes wouldn't know Volapük is/was a language, it is simply THE word for gibberish.
    Speaking of Rød grød med fløde as well, it is there for another reason as well. It is also THE one thing you will hear every Dane try to make a non-danish speaker say, since it's notoriously difficult.

    • @onurbschrednei4569
      @onurbschrednei4569 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Its pronounced "rote Grütze mit Creme"

    • @BrazilianImperialist
      @BrazilianImperialist Před 10 měsíci +3

      ​@@onurbschrednei4569no

    • @GeorgeDCowley
      @GeorgeDCowley Před 10 měsíci

      Redundant "as well".

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Volapyk being an actual language is like a fun fact you tell people in Denmark. The word just somehow entered common language and stuck around, presumably because it sounds really silly in Danish so it's a perfect word for nonsense.

  • @user-kq9zg5ys4m
    @user-kq9zg5ys4m Před 29 dny

    Thank yꙮu for this video. It’s so well-written, and it basically summarised what would have taken 2 years to learn into 2 hours

  • @robw0127
    @robw0127 Před 6 měsíci +4

    Really interesting and entertaining video! You obviously put a lot of work into this. Just wanted to point out regarding the section on Schleicher’s Fable, that the version that you show at 1:06:56 isn’t, I believe, Proto Indo European, but Proto, Indo Iranian, a daughter language of Proto Indo European. Thanks!

  • @Muropfel
    @Muropfel Před 9 měsíci +107

    A few years back I got hung up on the thought on what the plural of "Wombat" was (German) and i was too stubborn to just google it. So over the years I've asked people what they thought the correct plural was and I would throw in that it could be "Wombaten" and people would be second-guessing themselves, that it may be plausible that it, in fact, could be "Wombaten" or "Wombatten". When I felt cheeky, I would suggest "Wombatanten" or with English speakers "Wombatants". This video reminded me of the funny and extended discussions I had with people from all walks of life, friends and family to random strangers to job interviews.
    I now know that "Wombats" is correct in both English and German, though I still like to dabble in this topic from time to time, these friend-shaped creatures are just too adorable to pass up some funny 5 minutes. The small things in life :)

    • @tosche774
      @tosche774 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Actually I think the right form is "Womabte". "-s" is often wrongly used in German because people are used to the English plural. For example, the correct plural of "Park" in German is "Parke", not "Parks" as many people think. The same goes for "Test". The German plural is "Teste". But many people are used to the English plural "tests" and erroneously think "Tests" would also be the correct German form.

    • @Muropfel
      @Muropfel Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@tosche774 Did not know that, thanks

    • @GameTornado01
      @GameTornado01 Před 9 měsíci +2

      ​@@tosche774Dude stop trolling literally all those words are pluralised with an s in German.

    • @Bayyzed
      @Bayyzed Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@tosche774what a completely confident absolutely clueless person, holy shit lmfaooo

  • @Iudicatio
    @Iudicatio Před 9 měsíci +78

    As someone who lived in Germany for a long time, I don't believe that the "Antibabypillen" from Google translate is actually used very much. "Empfangnisverhütung" is a lot more common, at least in the region where I live. It means something like "protection against catching something", so it is admittedly funny too.
    Also, in Germany, "Sonntagsleere" takes on a completely different meaning, because almost everything is closed, and most people don't go to church anymore. It's a level of boredom that is difficult to comprehend.

    • @tombecker381
      @tombecker381 Před 9 měsíci +28

      As a German I hear Antibabypille more often then Empfängnisverhütung, but it could be a reginal thing. Edit: Often it also just "die Pille"

    • @blibibibi
      @blibibibi Před 9 měsíci +11

      Empfangnisverhütung literally means conception prevention. It is a much broader term, which also includes condoms and the like. And as the other native speaker said: It's usually "die Pille" or "Verhütung", if the general context is clear.

    • @KyttaIsHere
      @KyttaIsHere Před 8 měsíci +4

      I have been living in Germany for four years now (having studied the language for twelve years prior), and never in my life have I heard the word "Empfängnisverhütung" 😂 As mentioned by Tom, "die Pille" is what I've heard most people refer to it.

  • @user-tg1pu5mo2r
    @user-tg1pu5mo2r Před 3 měsíci

    I love languages and it's history!
    Awesome content 👌.

  • @andrewbolesworth9288
    @andrewbolesworth9288 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I usually ignore the "like and subscribe" bit, but yours was so good I'm going to comment too.

  • @guilhermeinaciokoplin1484
    @guilhermeinaciokoplin1484 Před 10 měsíci +116

    Just a comment about marmelada for the record. In portuguese we usualy put "ada" in the end of a fruit name to represent a jam or conserved fruit in sugar. So we have "Goiabada" from "Goiaba" (Guava in english), Bananada for bananas or "Marmelada" for "Marmelo" (Quince in english).
    The ending "ada" also have the meaning of an action executed, or a hit that was blown. So maybe it was refering to the act of smashing those fruits to make the jams.
    Also, mildly infuriated by adding Brasil in the lisp/no lisp map of spanish speaking countries.

    • @gomesroney
      @gomesroney Před 10 měsíci +29

      Nossa, duas horas de vídeo sobre fatos linguísticos pra classificar o Brasil como hispanohablante. Triste.

    • @ErieRosewood
      @ErieRosewood Před 10 měsíci +2

      not sure what map you're talking about. I've watched the ceceo portion 5 times tryna find it and I can't. are you talking about the last map shown? in which case algeria and other African countries were shown too, and they don't speak spanish. 1:04:09 Brazil was just shown because that's where it's located geographically.

    • @jayhache5609
      @jayhache5609 Před 10 měsíci

      Now we know how Canada got its name - smashing those fruits! 🤣
      But more seriously, did you know that Canada used to be spelt with only three letters? C, eh? N, eh? D, eh? 🤣
      I’m here all week, folks. Try the veal! 😀

    • @fL0p
      @fL0p Před 9 měsíci

      @@jayhache5609 the funny thing is... Veals gather in a MANADA (the Spanish word for pack/herd). Wolfs do as well. It's a more flexible word than English ones. We would use REBAÑO for herds of cattle, but wild herbivores gather in MANADAS :P 🦌

    • @jayhache5609
      @jayhache5609 Před 9 měsíci

      @@fL0p Thanks! Not sure if that makes it more or less flexible, though! 😁
      FYI, veal is the food word for sheep, and the plural of wolf is wolves. Cheers!

  • @slawless9665
    @slawless9665 Před 10 měsíci +103

    It's already funny enough that "the Brown Bear" actually refers to a particular species in English, but finding out that it means "the brown brown one" is even more delightful. I know there are other notably un-creative species names but Brown Bear just became my personal favorite.

    • @TheBayru
      @TheBayru Před 10 měsíci +4

      In the fable "Of the fox Reynaerde", my favourite character remains Bruun the brown bear just because of that. Also in dutch bear is spelled 'beer', while 'bear' pronounced in dutch would sound like the french bierre. However, the dutch word 'beer', apart from bear, can also mean sewage, or male pig (maybe because they are also brown? XD). Now I wonder if the english beer used to only refer to brown beer...

  • @selvanegrra
    @selvanegrra Před 3 měsíci

    This is one of the best videos of time, for sure

  • @denizbluemusic
    @denizbluemusic Před měsícem +2

    11:10
    Here in Turkey, German is often seen as seductive. The reason why is probably because while we barely learn about WWII in schools, especially before the internet, German adult movies were very popular in Turkey

  • @spunkytheozinho
    @spunkytheozinho Před 10 měsíci +140

    As a native Portuguese speaker I was always intrigued with color perspective through the languages.
    Apparently, "roxo" = purple, but we had the word "púrpura" too, but don't actually seems like the exactly same color.
    Also, "roxo" is kinda similar to "rojo", "rosso", "rouge" or "rosu" which means red in Spanish, Italian, French and Romanian respectively.
    Portuguese is the only Romantic Language that has "Vermelho" as a word for red, which is intriguing.
    Edit: yep, I understand that vermilion is red, I just accentuate the rojo/roxo thing

    • @pikapi6993
      @pikapi6993 Před 10 měsíci +15

      it's definitely a false friend for a language learner in the beginning. But it also makes sense that roxo became purple in portuguese to me. There are so many purple fruits and vegetables that are described as red, but they are obviously purple. There is red cabbage (which is purple) vs white cabbage (which is green). That always messed with my mind. Why don't we say purple cabbage and green cabbage. Sometimes they describe the red one as blue, too, here in my country. So they pick only on part of the real colour, because red and blue combined equals purple. It's just an assumption, but it wouldn't surprise me if this is part of the reason why roxo became purple in portuguese. Red cabbage is repolho roxo in portuguese, too if I remember correctly :)

    • @spunkytheozinho
      @spunkytheozinho Před 10 měsíci +5

      @@pikapi6993 Yep, it is "repolho roxo" here, and actually what you said makes so much sense.

    • @alexgamez7085
      @alexgamez7085 Před 10 měsíci +17

      Portuguese is not the only one, in catalan red is called "vermell". Also in Spanish there is the word "bermejo" which also means red and shares the same linguistic root of verme/berme/erme, which "vermell", "bermejo" and "vermelho" share

    • @spunkytheozinho
      @spunkytheozinho Před 10 měsíci

      @@alexgamez7085 uh, ok.
      This explain.

    • @zuzuomelete
      @zuzuomelete Před 10 měsíci +2

      Acho que o equivalente à "rojo" em português seria "rubro"

  • @thattimestampguy
    @thattimestampguy Před 10 měsíci +234

    *Level 1*
    0:34 Octopi 🐙 🐙
    1:39 French Silent Letters 🇫🇷
    2:20 Dearest Creature poem ✍🏻
    3:11 Tower of Babel ☦️
    3:50 Duolingo 🦉🟩
    5:07 Omlette Du Formage 🤓
    5:41 Pig Latin 🐷
    6:56 Hardest and Easiest Languages. 😫☺️
    8:25 American Monolingualism 🇺🇸
    9:43 Cyrillic 🇷🇺
    10:16 Quick Brown Fox 🦊
    11:09 German Language 🇩🇪
    12:23 Very Long German Words 🇩🇪
    14:45 Wales gogogoch🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿
    15:25 Ampersand “et” = &
    16:17 Untranslatable words. 🇩🇪, 🇮🇪
    18:38 Ghoti
    19:14 Esperanto “one who hopes.”
    21:18 Snow ❄️
    22:48 According to research.”
    23:35 Click Consonants
    24:23 Army & A Navy
    24:53 Newspeak 📰🗞️🙈🙊
    25:27 Rosetta Stone
    _Weird Sentences_
    26:35 Shi shi shi shi shi shi
    28:16 Colorless green ideas sleep furiously.
    29:27 Buffalo 8x 🦬
    30:35 Gendered Articles
    31:50 Code Switching
    33:40 Boustrophedon
    34:12 Saphir-Whorf
    35:49 Perscriptivist/Descriptivist
    *Level 3*
    37:28 The Great Vowel Shift
    38:33 Bbutanese Passport 🇧🇹
    41:27 Bear Taboo
    43:59 Critical Period 👶
    46:35 Toki Pona, breaking down complexity into simplicity.
    47:49 This is a Wug.
    49:11 Cockney Accent.
    50:45 Piraha
    52:37 Volapük
    54:25 Red Porridge with Cream
    54:44 Mele Kalikimaka 🎄⛪️
    55:44 Kiki and Bouba
    57:58 Ye Old
    59:04 Logland
    59:44 Pidgens & Creoles
    *Level 4*
    1:02:23 Silbo-Gomero 🇪🇸

    • @reichen666
      @reichen666 Před 10 měsíci +5

      Wow! I like you. OC-like. 🤓
      Just woke up to this video.
      4 minutes in now. 📚

    • @_iyakin
      @_iyakin Před 10 měsíci

      I like the emojis 😁💗

  • @sidunivers2sid844
    @sidunivers2sid844 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Wholeheartedly enjoyed the video to its fullest

  • @jaanaberg6125
    @jaanaberg6125 Před 7 měsíci +269

    As a native swedish speaker I'm laughing so hard about the inclusion of the inhaling "yes" because it caught me completely off guard 😂 I can also confirm that it is 100% accurate and I'd literally never even thought of it as something interesting until you mentioned it. Now that I think of it there actually also is a "correct" way to do it, it's not just a random gasp for air. You use the word "jo" or "juu" (depending on where you're from) and not the word "ja". Also, as you make that "u" shape with your lips and inhale briefly, you tilt your head back. An important thing to remember is that you only tilt your head back for the same duration of time as when you inhale. If, however, you wanna respond with a long "yes", you can also nod as you're inhaling but again, this is only for as long as you're actually inhaling. I would also make it a slow nod that starts with tilting your head back, as opposed to the standard type of nodding where you start by tilting your head forward.
    There you go, master this and you're basically a native swedish speaker 😂😂

    • @drts6955
      @drts6955 Před 7 měsíci +11

      I was recently in rural Ireland (I'm Irish btw) and heard an Irish person doing this. I thought he had a health problem. Then I met another. So it's a thing here too but only with some people. I've heard maybe the Vikings brought it but not sure if proven

    • @axl5180
      @axl5180 Před 7 měsíci +4

      It's also a thing in french ! mostly used by parisians tho. there also is a "correct way" to use it, rather than saying "oui" youd do an inhaled "ouais" which is the french equivalent of "yep"

    • @alicjafelkner8227
      @alicjafelkner8227 Před 7 měsíci +5

      I’m native polish speaker and my boyfriend is swedish theres not a single diner without them trying to teach me correct way to inhale air to say yes haha

    • @e-naa4118
      @e-naa4118 Před 7 měsíci +2

      About 12-15 years ago, when blogs were still a thing, there were several blogs by people trying to learn Norwegian named something with "hja"

    • @robo8478
      @robo8478 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Wierdly enough this exists with yes in certain midwest states including upper peninsula michigan nortgern illinois and minnesota. You say yes softly while inhaling and nodding

  • @majorlycunningham5439
    @majorlycunningham5439 Před 10 měsíci +88

    This also touches on the philosophy of language. Language itself is a man made tool that we use to communicate, so of course it will be imperfect and have flaws. The butterfly I think of when reading or hearing the word will be different from the butterfly you think of. As long we’re thinking of all the essential qualities that constitute a butterfly, language has done it’s job.

    • @intellectually_lazy
      @intellectually_lazy Před 10 měsíci +3

      lol, i wrote a short story called the butterfly. mine is kinda different

    • @ginguu2490
      @ginguu2490 Před 10 měsíci +1

      I think you're describing Saussure's sign

    • @WoozyCool
      @WoozyCool Před 10 měsíci

      Reminds of something I heard once,
      What if we all see different colors, but we labelled them in particular ways, hence we never realise?
      You see the green color, you say let's name it "blue".
      I see the color you called "blue", to me it looks red.
      Neither of us, so far, have named this color as green or red or anything yet.
      We both think, then agree with the name you mentioned, that it shall be called "blue" from now on.
      So, the color called "blue" will always look green to you, it will always look red to me. Yet we both named it as "blue".
      Hence whenever you say, hey pass me that "blue" paint, I will pass you the reddish looking paint.
      You will use it on the tree, as trees looked green to you. But to me, trees always looked red, so it's natural for me to paint it red. But remember, my red and your green is the one same color we named "blue".
      So even though we see and name it a certain way, this is the normality for us.
      We'll never know the truth.

  • @your_utube
    @your_utube Před 3 měsíci

    Epic work!

  • @danw6406
    @danw6406 Před 5 měsíci

    didnt think i will enjoy this, but man u did a good job!

  • @sofff225
    @sofff225 Před 8 měsíci +112

    As someone who speaks Finnish and English fluently, Swedish somewhat decently, and is learning Korean and just so happens to find languages absolutely fascinating, this is exactly the kind of stuff for me to be geeking over. Thank you!

    • @FriendlyALB
      @FriendlyALB Před 8 měsíci +3

      Vad gjorde du den 24 februari 2020? Om du inte minns, skriv talet femhundratjugotvå med siffror.

    • @sofff225
      @sofff225 Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@FriendlyALB lol förlåt, jag är finsk så min svenska grammatik är väldigt dåligt 😅 Men du skrev 522, är det rätt? Och ja, jag minns inte vad jag gjorde den dagen, mest på grund av covid heh

    • @FriendlyALB
      @FriendlyALB Před 8 měsíci

      @@sofff225 😅🤣 rätt

    • @sofff225
      @sofff225 Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@FriendlyALB mhmm, vad sa jag 😅 No but seriously, I say I know Swedish somewhat decently because I understand perfectly fine, I just can't really produce it that fluently. I do apologize for any grammatical atrocities here lol

    • @Draezeth
      @Draezeth Před 7 měsíci

      Can someone who speaks French please point out that "omelette du/de fromage" is grammatically incorrect?

  • @isabellstinessen
    @isabellstinessen Před 10 měsíci +86

    16:45 It should be “utepils” not “utepsils”. It directly translates to “outside pilsner”.
    In Norway, instead of asking people if they wanna grab a beer/pint, it is more common to ask if they wanna grab a pilsner. “Utepils” refers to drinking pilsner outside on a sunny summer day, often outside a bar/café.
    I think what makes it such a special moment for us is a mixture of the fact that we don’t get that many nice summer days a year, and that buying alcohol at bars/cafés is extremely expensive here, so we usually only drink at home. These two factors makes the experience of an “utepils” an idyllic moment for us.

    • @nissevelli
      @nissevelli Před 10 měsíci +11

      I’m Finland we have something similar called “pussikalja” which literally translates to “bag-beer”.
      That is, the process of buying beer, putting it in a plastic bag, and subsequently enjoying the outdoors while periodically taking drinks from out of the plastic bag and enjoying them. :)
      It should be mentioned that in the case of pussikalja, the connotations can oftentimes be negative due to this activity being a popular pastime of rowdy teenagers and unemployed adults with alcohol problems.

    • @Freshbott2
      @Freshbott2 Před 10 měsíci +6

      Exactly. You don’t experience a word from another culture just because someone can spell it out to you like a medical term.

    • @GuinessOriginal
      @GuinessOriginal Před 10 měsíci +1

      Jesus, you need to embrace beer garden culture more

    • @monosbeats7398
      @monosbeats7398 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Juuuteppsils 😂😂😂

    • @samuyilhyde1318
      @samuyilhyde1318 Před 10 měsíci +1

      In German you have "Wegbier" (way beer), the beer you drink on the walk to your destination, often a party or similiar event. Maybe it was shortly a pussikalja and as you walk outside it's definitly a utepils too :D

  • @reverbstarlight3405
    @reverbstarlight3405 Před 2 měsíci +1

    An absolutely excellent way to do the “like and subscribe” bit

  • @ffibonacci
    @ffibonacci Před 6 měsíci

    Interesting video!! Loved the occasional Runescape emotes you slipped in throughout

  • @GTaichou
    @GTaichou Před 10 měsíci +46

    It is absolutely wild to have seen emoticon/emoji form and mix as it happened. I was in college learning Japanese, and Japanese had emoji before emoticons were commonly used in the US (emotes were primarily ASCII when Japanese already had emoji). I remember in the earlier years of emoji in Japan there also being a bit of a play on words joke of 絵文字 ("emoji") picture letters and エモ字 ("emoji") "emo" characters, like emoting characters. Granted, this joke may have primarily been in multilingual, Japanese as as second language circles.
    Edit: also curious how the Italian somatic expression for "eff you" ended up in Wisconsin. I totally have used and seen it used growing up, and have been confused since when folks didn't understand it elsewhere.

    • @fL0p
      @fL0p Před 9 měsíci +3

      If you're referring to vaffanculo, that's a 100% italo-american expression. It would travel back to the Old World and end up being adopted by the Italy of "today", but it's as Italian as deep dish Chicago-style pizza.
      Just a 'cimarrón' (a Mustang horse, becoming wild again after being introduced in America) expression.