The Thingification of Words | Semantic Bleaching

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  • čas přidán 1. 03. 2024
  • What's the yoke about?
    / discord
    / nakarispeardane
    ko-fi.com/nakari
    www.redbubble.com/people/naka...
    Etymologies from etymonline + Wiktionary. sorry for my pronunciations lol
    irishenglishisms.home.blog/20...
    qz.com/474671/move-over-shake...
    www.languagejones.com/blog-1/...
    www.latimes.com/opinion/story...
    "River Fire" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
    Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License
    creativecommons.org/licenses/b...

Komentáře • 370

  • @mmcworldbuilding5994
    @mmcworldbuilding5994 Před 3 měsíci +538

    I’m Irish and I can’t lie I had completely forgotten that a yoke was an actual ploughing instrument in the first place💀💀

    • @GuyNamedSean
      @GuyNamedSean Před 3 měsíci +28

      Meanwhile, in America, you'd probably immediately think of the ploughing instrument since it's a common metaphor among Evangelical Christians. (being yoked to Jesus or yoked to a virtuous partner or a bad influence)

    • @superplaylists1616
      @superplaylists1616 Před 3 měsíci +11

      ​@@GuyNamedSeanMatthew 11 28-30
      "Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light."

    • @rjtimmerman2861
      @rjtimmerman2861 Před 3 měsíci +18

      I was thinking of an egg yolk😬

    • @user-ze7sj4qy6q
      @user-ze7sj4qy6q Před 3 měsíci +12

      @@GuyNamedSeanim american (non evangelical) and i've never heard either of those metaphors so i imagine those aren't as well known outside of evangelical circles

    • @spencerburke
      @spencerburke Před 2 měsíci

      Sure, you're an awful yokeen altogether...

  • @selladore4911
    @selladore4911 Před 2 měsíci +107

    "delirium? stroke? dementia? no, just linguistics. you see, my grandmother is irish" is the BEST hook to a video ive seen

  • @thomasloos8257
    @thomasloos8257 Před 3 měsíci +261

    As a German lawyer I'll add that "Sache" is still used to mean a legal dispute, but I wasn't aware that that's actually the older meaning.

    • @bramklinkenberg9140
      @bramklinkenberg9140 Před 3 měsíci +12

      Interesting similarity with Dutch where we use 'Zaak' or more formally 'Rechtzaak' for that too.
      Not to be confused with 'Zaak' meaning store or 'Zaken' meaning Business or 'Zaak' meaning matter 😅

    • @pierreabbat6157
      @pierreabbat6157 Před 2 měsíci +5

      Spanish "lid", which is from Latin "lis" (lawsuit), often means "fight/struggle".

    • @papablezt211
      @papablezt211 Před 2 měsíci +3

      ​@@bramklinkenberg9140 thank you for this! I'm learning Dutch now for fun and I definitely had not picked up on this yet. I really like how recht is applied to things like the law and things being formally straightforward or literally straight ahead. Dutch is full of amusing literal translations for me as a native English speaker

    • @thomaseriksen6885
      @thomaseriksen6885 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Sak, Rettsak, Søksmål 🇳🇴

    • @olleani
      @olleani Před měsícem +1

      In Swedish, when you are presenting your case in a court it's called Sakframställan. Literally "legal case-forward-putting"

  • @andrewg.carvill4596
    @andrewg.carvill4596 Před 2 měsíci +52

    The 'hames' was a part of the horse's yoke that it was easy to attach incorrectly, giving rise to another Irish expression "he made a hames of it", meaning he messed it up. "He made a right hames of that yoke, and we were half the morning putting it right again" was the kind of expression my father often used.

  • @tux_duh
    @tux_duh Před 3 měsíci +339

    I love how languages evolve! Its one of my hyperfixations and it always urks me when people are language "purists" bc language has never been pure and is just a reflection of the society and time its spoken in!

    • @spelcheak
      @spelcheak Před 3 měsíci +5

      It urks me when people act like words have no meaning and that errors are impossible. Teenage girls hate hearing that rules apply to them, doesn’t matter how many people stop fighting them. Wrong is wrong.

    • @OGsploorp
      @OGsploorp Před 3 měsíci +12

      irks*

    • @charlesrogers347
      @charlesrogers347 Před 3 měsíci +50

      @@spelcheak A stuffier grammarian than I might take issue with your misspelling of "irks", your use of "like" in place of "as though", the gerund "hearing" in place of the infinitive "to hear", a comma instead of a semicolon between your independent clauses, and lack of an explicit subject "it" before "doesn't". Even an almost universally accepted contraction like "doesn't" was once widely eschewed and still is by some people in certain contexts.
      Any set of rules and regulations you can come up with simply won't apply to many other speakers of your language. I'm sure you'll agree that enforcing such rules is absurd, even though they might once have been or might still be meaningful for someone else.

    • @claytoncallaway6412
      @claytoncallaway6412 Před 3 měsíci +15

      in language wrong is mostly context dependent so whatever you feel is wrong is not necessarily wrong. Linguists will generally say that any speech that's comprehensible to the intended audience is "correct"@@spelcheak

    • @tux_duh
      @tux_duh Před 3 měsíci +24

      @@spelcheak nah, I just grew up in Appalachia and our dialect is interesting and it led me down the rabbit hole.
      Language isn't wrong unless you can't understand what we're saying.
      You just might be classist, most people who are language purists are. Essentially you are saying "you are uneducated" when education HIGHLY depends on the income of your area

  • @GhERM2SOIED72
    @GhERM2SOIED72 Před 3 měsíci +49

    "A wyrd guy? How flattering you'd call me a fated guide."

  • @dragemit
    @dragemit Před 3 měsíci +66

    yoke has a long history in being used as a metaphor for a burden; that's an alternative route it may have been thingified through: thing that burdens you metaphorically > thing that's literally heavy to carry > thing you carry > thing

    • @Jumpoable
      @Jumpoable Před měsícem +3

      Yoke also related to Sanskrit YOGA, a practice to HARNESS your mental, emotional & energetic bodies through physical exercises. Ancient Indo-European roots.

  • @GabrielGABFonseca
    @GabrielGABFonseca Před 3 měsíci +35

    I am absolutely convinced someone a thousand years ago would have gone "uhm, acktchuallee" regarding the 'misappropriation' of Latin words.

    • @jylietmaddyzpires2442
      @jylietmaddyzpires2442 Před 2 měsíci +9

      Cicero once complained to a friend that people were using the Latin word "penis" wrong ("at hodie penis est in obscenis"), because of course it always meant "tail" and should never mean anything else. "Tail" was actually a secondary definition, but he'd surely have a few words to say about how it got adopted into English.

  • @HeadsFullOfEyeballs
    @HeadsFullOfEyeballs Před 3 měsíci +109

    The Lithuanian word for "thing", _daiktas,_ seems to have originally meant "sticky-outy bit". Thence "something that _metaphorically_ sticks out, stands out" and then "that thing I mean".

    • @NakariSpeardane
      @NakariSpeardane  Před 3 měsíci +15

      Oh that's a really good one!!!

    • @40watt53
      @40watt53 Před 3 měsíci +7

      "Thence"? that's a word?? that's a good word.

    • @jeremydavis3631
      @jeremydavis3631 Před 2 měsíci +11

      @@40watt53 Yep! It means "from there", and "thither" means "to there". There are also "hence", "hither", "whence", and "whither", which follow exactly the same pattern with "here" and "where"!

    • @40watt53
      @40watt53 Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@jeremydavis3631 Incredible. All going into my daily vocabulary.

    • @jaimetakoff
      @jaimetakoff Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@jeremydavis3631 That's so interesting. Are there words like that derived from 'yonder'?

  • @gustavovaz2535
    @gustavovaz2535 Před 3 měsíci +103

    great video! in brazilian portuguese the word "negócio", that originally meant "business", is used as a word for "thing", I couldn't understand the paths it took to get to this meaning and I never found any explanation, but now I believe it was probably something close to the word "thing", so thank you very much for solving this mystery for me.

    • @felixfire6583
      @felixfire6583 Před 3 měsíci +13

      It comes from the latin negotium, wich meant work, the word itself literaly means absence of otium, a latin concept that ranged from actualy relaxing to humanitary studies

    • @leandrocarvalho7191
      @leandrocarvalho7191 Před 3 měsíci +15

      Coisa, negócio, troço, treco, bagulho, trem, breguete... there's so many 'things' in br-portuguese.

    • @drake9634
      @drake9634 Před 3 měsíci +5

      ​@@felixfire6583Portuguese actually has that word too in the form of Ócio, it's basically the same meaning as it's Latin root without the humanitary part.

    • @felixfire6583
      @felixfire6583 Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@drake9634 same for the italian word "ozio"

    • @luanabarbosa2091
      @luanabarbosa2091 Před 3 měsíci +6

      gets weirder if you're here from Minas Gerais, how does "trem" (train) means "thing", no idea, but it means haha, along many other words like "bodega" that meant originally "bar" but is also used as "thing" and other nonsense words we make on the way

  • @FinnmacD
    @FinnmacD Před 3 měsíci +67

    Where i'm from (Eastern Pennsylvania) our word for thing is "jawn". I was actually explaining it to a friend out of state yesterday, so the timing of this video is pretty perfect

    • @aLadNamedNathan
      @aLadNamedNathan Před měsícem

      I've never heard that--but I have heard something a bit similar (depending on how you pronounce "jawn").
      A friend of mine who had been in the navy complained about the blacks whom he met there using a word, "jonque," whenever they didn't know what something was called. I'm guessing "jonque" might be derived from "junk." (I invented my own spelling for it.) The difference in pronunciation between "junk" and "jonque" is not the sound at the end of the word. Rather, it is the vowel. The vowel in "jonque" is pronounced like the "a" in "father."
      I found my friend's comment a bit ignorant, as "jonque" is used in exactly the same way as "thing."

  • @Liboo52
    @Liboo52 Před 2 měsíci +12

    I think “bleaching” is a good word for it because it illustrates how the strong primary *color* of the original word fades away, becoming less distinctive

  • @thatotherted3555
    @thatotherted3555 Před 3 měsíci +120

    I was particularly interested by the mention of how teenage girls tend to be at the forefront of language change. I've seen one or two mentions of this before, but it seems like not enough people talk about it. If we want a glimpse into the future of our languages, we should be eavesdropping on teenagers!

    • @MCArt25
      @MCArt25 Před 3 měsíci +7

      based

    • @aloysiusdevadanderabercrombie8
      @aloysiusdevadanderabercrombie8 Před 3 měsíci +22

      Be careful with that train of thought, though, because it's not like teenage girls as a monolith are inventing new things and _all_ using them. You could listen to teenage girls speaking at some high school in Madison, WI and think "so this is the future development of English" and be totally wrong because it was the innovations that were made by teenage girls in a high school in San Francisco that became dominant. Or rather, it's more like bits and pieces from all of the teen girl sociolects all around the country are coagulated while others are discarded, entirely at random and with literally no rhyme or reason
      Unfortunately, it's literally impossible to predict any sort of language change with any level of confidence whatsoever

    • @thatotherted3555
      @thatotherted3555 Před 3 měsíci +13

      @@aloysiusdevadanderabercrombie8Just to clarify, I wasn't planning to go prowling around high schools to collect data. I was thinking of, like, family members on major holidays, that kind of thing.

    • @aloysiusdevadanderabercrombie8
      @aloysiusdevadanderabercrombie8 Před 3 měsíci

      @@thatotherted3555 Sure, and it absolutely would be interesting to see the innovations they make, I just don't want people to be disappointed if it's not mainsteam in 10 years lol

    • @claytoncallaway6412
      @claytoncallaway6412 Před 3 měsíci +7

      it's not teen girls, most modern innovation of English comes from ebonics so it's the black community that's on the cutting edge of English

  • @turingmachine4617
    @turingmachine4617 Před 2 měsíci +20

    There is an additional usage of “yoke” here that I find intriguing. A “mad yoke” is a person you’re unsure of, or acting strangely. As in, “who’s that mad yoke standing in the middle of the road?”

    • @mccluskeytom
      @mccluskeytom Před 2 měsíci +2

      That just means "mad thing". "Yon yoke in the corner" would be mildly derogatory. The most important use of "yoke" that she doesn't mention here is to very specifically refer to an ecstacy tablet.

    • @richiehoyt8487
      @richiehoyt8487 Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​@@mccluskeytom I've certainly heard people say things like " _That_ yoke in the corner", but never " _Yon_ yoke in the corner"... is that just me, or is that a typo?
      As for the other usage you mention, you're absolutely right - I'm glad you mentioned it! Anyone who grew up in Ireland since the late '80's who's even broadly familiar with drug and/or club/rave culture would be conversant with this meaning. Should someone in a group of young people getting ready to head out for a night's revelry say "So, who's sorting out 'the yokes'?" absolutely _no-one_ is going to think they're talking about TV remotes, can openers, bulldog clips, or _anything_ like that, although the 'MDMA tablet' usage is obviously derived from the 'thingamabob' meaning. Like sex and money, drugs have always been such a delightfully rich source of slang!
      It kind of reminds me of what happened with the word 'Crack' (or 'Craic'), although sort of the other way around. As many will know, in addition to its usual meaning of 'split' or 'seam', in Ireland the word 'crack' is often used to refer to 'sport' or 'fun', in the sense of 'good clean - or even, slightly disreputable - fun'. _Slightly_ disreputable, inasmuch as alcohol may - or may not - be involved; but certainly, no Class A drugs! There was even a popular song in the '70's that went "The crack was 90 in the Isle of Man", "90" here being the maximum reading on the 'intensity' scale, for example, "My blood pressure was 'up to 90' " - but that's probably best left for another day's work! Anyway, there are countless tales out there, possibly apocryphal, possibly not, of somewhat naïve Irish tourists or students on working holidays arriving at JFK, Logan, LAX etc at the time the scourge of Crack Cocaine was first starting to become an epidemic and announcing to customs or immigration that they were in America, "Ah, y'know yourself sure, for a bit of crack..!" and wondering how things turned so ugly so fast! In fact, even though this particular Irish usage of the word 'crack' seems to now be much more widely understood internationally than it was in the late '80's and '90's, confusion of the sort mentioned would become such a problem that at least when rendered in written form, the word has largely reverted to its Gaelic origin, 'Craic', the Hiberno~English transliteration of 'Crack' having more~or~less fallen by the wayside..!

    • @spencerburke
      @spencerburke Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​@@richiehoyt8487 I have read somewhere that the Irish word craic is not Irish at all, but is a derivation of the English word crack. Its use today in Irish is recognisable in the very England phrase 'cracking'. As in, "That was a cracking dinner-party last night, Jeeves."

    • @genevievedolan1288
      @genevievedolan1288 Před 2 měsíci

      Cracking good time was used in England ages ago. Another use of crack in USA is cracker for a red neck type. Anyone know where that came from?

    • @mccluskeytom
      @mccluskeytom Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@richiehoyt8487 "Yon" = yonder = what light through yonder window breaks = over there.
      "Yon yoke in the corner" = that thing over there in the corner = that person over there in the corner.
      This is a bit of rural Monaghanese, where I'm from. You'd probably hear it in South Armagh and throughout the border region.
      I enjoyed your study of the uses of the word crack / craic. One minor point - as much as it pains me to admit it, the word is an English import to the island and entered the gaeilge through settler English. The original spelling was "crack".

  • @Lilas.Duveteux
    @Lilas.Duveteux Před 3 měsíci +32

    Okay, so in French, many words can be very generic. The french word for glasses is: "lunettes", always plural, because it would refer to the roundish frames of the glasse.
    Lunette can mean: a loophole, a toilet seat or a guillotine hole that holds the neck in place. The French word: "bouton" can mean a button like one uses for clothing, but also a flower bud and a zit. In modern French, the word: "bécane" means "the machine I use for work or hobby", and it can thus be incredibly generic. The french word "baiser" as a verb could mean: to fuck, in more old now "to kiss" and in old slang: "to be lynched or executed". Prior to the verb "lyncher" entiring the commonly spoken tongue, "baiser la lanterne" or "à la lanterne" meant being lynched, which now colloqually means to take a collective beating, or getting jumped. In modern French, the word: "déguster" means formally and also informally to consume something delectable, but in a slightly more old-fashioned slang now, it means "to suffer".
    Many french word to refer to violence are food related. The verb: "Harceler" etymologically comes from "herceler" which means to plow a field for growing crops and making it all nice and straight and equal, ideal for growing crops, most often wheat. "Crapaudine" mean to "cut off the spine of an animal to make the carcass lie flat" also came to refer to a torture method, which did not involve butchering the victim, on the contrairy.
    Both Russian and French have a history of using informally, until very recently, slang terms to refer someone being victimized would be spoken in active voice.

  • @loganstrait7503
    @loganstrait7503 Před 2 měsíci +4

    I love how saying, "We get together and do our thing," is more accurate to the etymology of the word "thing" than referring to objects as "thing".

  • @ourpetsarecute3110
    @ourpetsarecute3110 Před 3 měsíci +47

    Hate to be an “um actually” sorta person, but you wrote דבר backwards, which is kinda funny since this is a linguistics video. Keep up the great work

    • @NakariSpeardane
      @NakariSpeardane  Před 3 měsíci +46

      NOOOOOOOO I SWORE I CHECKED IT ;-; Sorry!!! My art program has an issue with right to left text v_v

    • @ourpetsarecute3110
      @ourpetsarecute3110 Před 3 měsíci +17

      @@NakariSpeardanetechnical issues get us all one day

  • @sevencubed_
    @sevencubed_ Před 3 měsíci +37

    that is an opening

  • @IAmBene
    @IAmBene Před 3 měsíci +40

    This sent me down a rabbithole of looking for the origins of all the German words for "thing" I could think of, some of them are very obvious, you already mentioned "Ding", "Teil" also means "part", "Zeug" comes from "ziehen" ("to pull"), "Gelöte" I guess comes from "löten" ("to solder"), though I couldn't find anything on it online. Then there's "Gedöns", "Kram", "Krempel", "Pipapo", "Kruscht" (which I've also found written as "Grusch", "Gruscht", "Grust", or "Gerust", and which probably comes from "Rüstzeug", meaning "armour/weapons/stuff for war"), and probably more that I'm not familiar with. Language is fascinating!

    • @l.c.8475
      @l.c.8475 Před 3 měsíci +6

      "Kram" and "Krempel" come from "Gerümpel", which comes from "rumpel" meaning noise or rumbling

    • @aramisortsbottcher8201
      @aramisortsbottcher8201 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Also interesting how certain dialect words (like Kruscht) become part of the standard language. I would have no idea where Kruscht comes from while I totaly understand Gerust.

    • @niku..
      @niku.. Před 3 měsíci +2

      Gelöte doesn't come from löten but rather Lot (cognate to English lead) and originally referred to weights on a scale.
      Kram was originally referring to the tents of merchants. Further etymology unknown.
      Krempel, interestingly enough, isn't related to Kram or Gerümpel. Rather it's a variant of Upper German, especially Alemannic, Grempel 'retail' from grempeln 'to retail', iterative form of Late Middle High German grempen which is likely borrowed from a Romance language. Compare Italian comprare 'to buy', Old Provencial crompar 'to buy, pay' from Latin comparare 'to compare, match, place together' later also 'to pay with money'. So it's ultimately related to English compare.
      Gerümpel comes from rumpeln, rummeln, related to English rumble.
      There so many more.
      The standard dictionary for German etymology is Kluge's Etymologisches Wörterbuch but it's not freely available. The dwds (Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache) has detailed etymologies for most lexemes but most valuable is the historical dictionary section (Deutsches Wörterbuch by the Grimm brothers) because some words used to be more common but have fallen out of fashion

    • @SharkUsingaComputer
      @SharkUsingaComputer Před 3 měsíci +1

      dont forget "der Teil" and "das Teil" have different meanings too 😭

    • @Idkpleasejustletmechangeit
      @Idkpleasejustletmechangeit Před 2 měsíci +1

      I've never heard Gelöte and Kruscht tbh.

  • @LiyemEanapay
    @LiyemEanapay Před 3 měsíci +14

    Really weird that you uploaded this when you did. I rewatched this Irish comedy movie last night, and they kept using “yoke” in this way. I tried to figure out what the hell they meant, but had no luck.
    On a side note, my mom’s family is French-Canadian. They use “piton” the same way. The word _does_ have an actual meaning in French, but I don’t know if this is a result of semantic bleaching.

  • @felixfire6583
    @felixfire6583 Před 3 měsíci +26

    To be fair causa became 2 words in italian, we still have a word, "causa", meaning motive or reason

    • @scurly0792
      @scurly0792 Před 3 měsíci +7

      also in french 'cause' is still a reason e.g. à cause de ça- to (the) cause of that- because of that, which was borrowed directly from latin whereas 'chose' evolved from it

    • @gustavovaz2535
      @gustavovaz2535 Před 3 měsíci +8

      same in portuguese, we have causa/causo(cause) and coisa/cousa(thing), but it seems that the ones meaning "cause" are borrowed, not inherited, this means that they were learned from latin books by romance speakers, not passed down through their parents/community and so on.

    • @Elisadoestransstuff
      @Elisadoestransstuff Před 3 měsíci +3

      Causa is a Latin borrowing, so removes part of the cool semantic stuff

    • @Mikelaxo
      @Mikelaxo Před 3 měsíci +2

      Same in spanish, "causa" and "cosa"

  • @ilijamitrevski1210
    @ilijamitrevski1210 Před 3 měsíci +13

    In Macedonian the word for "thing" is "rabota" which primarily means "work" and "job". It comes from Proto-Slavic *orbota which also means "work" and in turn is derived from the word for "slave", *orbъ. That comes from Proto-Balto-Slavic *árbas which comes from Proto-Indo-European *h₃órbʰos, which meant "orphan".

    • @NakariSpeardane
      @NakariSpeardane  Před 3 měsíci +8

      Oh!! Related to robot?! That's a really good one!

    • @mynamejeff3545
      @mynamejeff3545 Před 3 měsíci +6

      ​@@NakariSpeardane Yes, the word "robot" comes from a Czech play in which artificial humans are made in factories for the purpose of certain jobs. Robot then came to mean any intelligent creature or machine made for the purpose of work, though nowadays we'd probably call the articifial people from the play "androids" rather than robots.

    • @talideon
      @talideon Před 3 měsíci +3

      It's also related to the Latin word "opera" and the Irish word "obair", both of which mean "work, exertion, labour".
      Oh, and "arbeit" in German.

    • @incitatus953
      @incitatus953 Před 2 měsíci +1

      That is genuinely awesome

    • @hieronymus9
      @hieronymus9 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Not opera. That comes from *Hep-, not *Herbh-. The r in opera is originally *s, which became r between vowels in Latin. opus, operis…

  • @GoBobe
    @GoBobe Před 3 měsíci +19

    Oh, im gonna be chewin on this video for MONTHS. I think my maximum scope is generally a tidge smaller than yours, but this opens up SO many lineage trails! I can't wait to have fully processed it all! Thank you for all your effort posting your brain as often as you do!!!

  • @gtc239
    @gtc239 Před 3 měsíci +8

    The word for thing in Indonesian is interesting imo as a native myself, it's "Sesuatu" and it comes from se- (prefix meaning a/whole/one from *esa and cognate with Tagalog "isa") + suatu (a determiner close to the meaning with English indefinite article, can also mean "thing".), now what's interesting is that "suatu" comes from se- (the aforementioned numeral prefix) + batu (stone).
    So the change is like:
    se-batu (a + stone) > sewatu (one) > suatu (one in Classical Malay) > se-suatu (thing).
    Also cognate with the number one (satu) that loses its u.

    • @myspleenisbursting4825
      @myspleenisbursting4825 Před 2 měsíci

      More specifically it came from *sabatu. Malay underwent lenited (?) the sequence -aba- into -awa-, like in *kaban → kawan.
      sabatu → *sawatu → suatu → satu
      As a native Malay speaker that's also fluent in Indonesian though, calling "sesuatu" the word for 'thing' feels kinda weird to me. It just depends on the situation. You wouldn't say "Tolong ambilkan sesuatu itu."

  • @altocatt
    @altocatt Před 3 měsíci +4

    I found the first bit hilarious, because growing up with an Irish mother, yoke almost always translates directly to tv remote!

  • @albinmossberg9714
    @albinmossberg9714 Před 2 měsíci +4

    Another interesting part about the Swedish words sak (thing) and ting (assembly, court) is that there exist a common saying where we use both to say "things and such", in swedish "saker och ting"

  • @paiwanhan
    @paiwanhan Před 3 měsíci +8

    During the development of Old Chinese, speakers of the language had significant contact with speakers of one or more Indo-European languages, and borrowed many words into Old Chinese. Aside from the obvious ones like *mit 蜜 meaning honey and is cognate of the English word mead, and *C.q(r)a 車 meaning and is cognate with the English word car, the word for yoke, *qˤ[i]k 軛, is also borrowed in its original meaning. However, yoke had bleached meaning in Old Chinese as well, *[q](r)ewk 約 meaning to connect, to attach, to constrain, and now usually meaning an agreement, a treaty, a meeting and more. Interestingly, yoke is also cognate with yoga, which once meant to join with the supreme spirit.

    • @weirdofromhalo
      @weirdofromhalo Před 2 měsíci

      And nobody knows why 东西 in a lot of Sinitic languages means "thing." It's not like 南北 broadened, so it's curious why 东西 did. Also, for those who don't know Chinese, those are the four cardinal directions, with 东西 literally meaning east and west and was extended to mean nearby. Perhaps that's one way it eventually got to "thing."

    • @paiwanhan
      @paiwanhan Před 2 měsíci

      @@weirdofromhalo 東西 is a rather late term to be thingy-fied. Languages closer to Early Middle Chinese all just use the original word for thing, 物 /but/, like the languages of Tsiang-tsiu, Tsuân-tsiu, Amoy, and even Japanese use 物. 東西 likely came from the belief in the 5 basic elements, metal, wood, water, fire, and earth. The cardinal directions are philosophically linked to the elements, and east represents wood and in association food, and west represents metal. Since wood and metal are the two basic elements that make up most physical things, 東西 became thingy-fied as a word play no sooner than Late Tang dynasty. Some other people claim it came from the fact that most Chinese cities back then had two major markets, referred to as East or West Market, shopping often involve visiting both. I'm not sure which one is more likely.

    • @Jumpoable
      @Jumpoable Před měsícem

      @@paiwanhan Hokkien/ Fujian/ Minnan languages: 物件 [mikkiã][mekkiã]
      Wu (Eastern Chinese languages like Shanghainese/ Ningbo/ Suzhou/ Zhenjiang/Hangzhou): 物事 [mezzi]
      Yue (Cantonese languages) The classifier for any random object 個/个/ became [go][ge] > [ye] usually now written phonetically in informal Cantonese.
      Interestingly, the classical Chinese word for thing 物 [mAt6] (flat low tone) became 乜 [mAt1] (high falling tone) which is the modern Cantonese word for "what" possibly from "(what) thing?" 
      This is similar to Italian cosa meaning "thing" & also "what?"

  • @virtuousvibes2852
    @virtuousvibes2852 Před 3 měsíci +4

    May I say that your combination of being an artist, worldbuilder, and linguistics nerd made me smash that subscribe button instantly. You did a great job talking about etymologies.

  • @AmberDawn8668
    @AmberDawn8668 Před 2 měsíci +3

    in philadelphia slang 'jawn' is the same!! it's so neat to see someone explain it like this, thank you!

    • @aLadNamedNathan
      @aLadNamedNathan Před měsícem

      I've never heard that--but I have heard something a bit similar (depending on how you pronounce "jawn").
      A friend of mine who had been in the navy complained about the blacks whom he met there using a word, "jonque," whenever they didn't know what something was called. I'm guessing "jonque" might be derived from "junk." (I invented my own spelling for it.) The difference in pronunciation between "junk" and "jonque" is not the sound at the end of the word. Rather, it is the vowel. The vowel in "jonque" is pronounced like the "a" in "father."
      I found my friend's comment a bit ignorant, as "jonque" is used in exactly the same way as "thing."

  • @riverground
    @riverground Před 3 měsíci +5

    Thanks for that piece of knowledge! Many times, learning english as a swedish speaking child, I was annoyed and fascinated by words that sounded so similar in both languages yet meant so very different things. Now I kbow why a few of them are that way!

  • @2tbk
    @2tbk Před 3 měsíci +13

    Lovely video as always

  • @ataiambus5046
    @ataiambus5046 Před 3 měsíci +8

    Tiny nitpick: the Hebrew word for thing, דבר, is spelled backwards in the video (as רבד, meaning layer). Damn RTL.
    Really interesting video, anyway. Plus your drawing of your grandma is beautiful and the guinea pigs are adorable.

    • @NakariSpeardane
      @NakariSpeardane  Před 3 měsíci +4

      Yeah I checked all the rtl text cause my art program is fussy but I think I just didn't spot that they were different letters ;-; sorry!! And thank you :D

  • @williacena
    @williacena Před měsícem

    That’s so fun! In Brazilian Portuguese, depending on the region, you might use “train” or “business” to refer to a “thing”. Like “what’s that train in your kitchen?”, or “can you handle me that business?”

  • @faizyroombaunit908
    @faizyroombaunit908 Před měsícem +2

    This was really cool and made me realize my own native lang urdu has this too- (also a hindi word)
    we have *baat*-- which i just realized is pretty far gone in this process of "thingification" too
    this root of *bat-/baat* has to do with "speech/telling/talking"
    like in the verb *bataanaa* (= to tell)
    and the word *baat*, which is like the simple noun of that root, evolved from meaning smth like "things that are said / speech" to "things talked about" to smth like "subject of speech" and then just "thing that happens" in general, kinda--
    like it hasn't quite been 100% "thingified" yet-- you can only really use it for things where it makes sense to say "thing that is talked about", like- "don't smoke, it's a bad baat" ("bad thing" i.e "shouldn't be done") or "it's not that big of a baat" ("not that big of a deal")
    but not really "that's my favourite thing" (maybe if you were referring to a process/happening that you like?? but not just an object)
    for an example of the concurrently existing more literal meaning-
    or "what kind of baat do y'all do" = smth like "what do you people even talk about" (usually chastising, implying that it's distasteful)
    or "these *baat*s annoy me" = these things / happenings annoy me
    but it could also mean "these things (that they say) annoy me", if interpreted more literally-- it is 10000% concept dependent. like- if you already were discussing smth, say: "nowadays there's been a spike in cases of bullying at school. this baat really concerns me" then it kinda means both?
    "this (thing that is under discussion) annoys me"
    but also just- "this thing annoys me"
    so yeah! really cool to learn about the connection to how this is really common in all sorts of languages.

  • @Pingwn
    @Pingwn Před 2 měsíci +3

    This is a wonderful video, as always!
    You probably have heard it already, but you displayed the word דבר backwards. Although your description was accurate.

  • @riverAmazonNZ
    @riverAmazonNZ Před 2 měsíci +1

    The “quite nice” example reminds me of an ad for coffee that used to be on tv. A wife brings her husband a cup of coffee and tells him it’s a new brand. He takes a sip and says, “it’s quite nice.”
    The ad must have been written by an american … it did not convey what they meant it to, to a New Zealand audience. We’re a little wee bit british here. That coffee brand was not successful.

  • @blazerlazer55
    @blazerlazer55 Před 2 měsíci +1

    cool stuff, great art!
    in indonesian/malay we have "benda" (object), borrowed from sanskrit भाण्ड (bhāṇḍa) which has uncertain etymology and plenty of meanings but the relevant one here seems to be "goods/valuables", cognate with tamil வண்டி (vaṇṭi) meaning "vehicle".
    and then there's "barang" (stuff) which came from a sort of austronesian indefinite marker and coexists alongside it!
    "barang siapa" could either mean "whose stuff" or "whoever"

  • @finhornby8556
    @finhornby8556 Před 2 měsíci +2

    gives a whole new meaning to the phrase "I _like_ like you" 😰

  • @daviderenda9211
    @daviderenda9211 Před 19 dny

    this channel Is an hidden gem, I'm so happy to have found it!

  • @junovzla
    @junovzla Před 2 měsíci +1

    in Spanish the word 'vaina' means sheath, but in Venezuelan Spanish it went to being considered a swear word and now is a general word for thing like 'yoke'
    we Venezuelans also do that thing Australians do of calling people harsh insults as informal greetings, and it's also made those words lose the insulting character to them

  • @chips989
    @chips989 Před 3 měsíci +4

    Ive heard it used to describe drugs, specifically ecstasy

  • @ladymorwendaebrethil-feani4031
    @ladymorwendaebrethil-feani4031 Před 2 měsíci +1

    In the place where i live, "train" means "thing", because in 19th there are a lot of gold mines here and they built a lot of railroads, and everything becomes a "train".

  • @hussitewagoner6838
    @hussitewagoner6838 Před 2 měsíci

    Southern Irish US , “ The Thingy-ma-bob is kept on the whos-e-not”, in the kitchen.
    The item is on the “catch all” shelf in the kitchen.

  • @bw4708
    @bw4708 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I loved the whole video but I just want to say I absolutely adore the little cows you drew 😂

  • @Lazerbalde
    @Lazerbalde Před 2 měsíci +1

    Never reflected on that “sak” Swedish is both a thing, an action and a legal term. Brilliant video

  • @guilhermeandradedaveiga5605
    @guilhermeandradedaveiga5605 Před 2 měsíci

    'Train' is the word for thing in a particular region of Brazil.
    So much so that there is this joke about two people in a platform, and one tells the other, "pick up the trains, the thing is coming!".

  • @watson-disambiguation
    @watson-disambiguation Před 3 měsíci +4

    Philadelphia has a very particular thingified word, jawn, which most likely comes from the word joint

    • @aLadNamedNathan
      @aLadNamedNathan Před měsícem

      I've never heard that--but I have heard something a bit similar.
      A friend of mine who had been in the navy complained about the blacks whom he met there using a word, "jonque," whenever they didn't know what something was called. I'm guessing "jonque" might be derived from "junk." (I invented my own spelling for it.) The difference in pronunciation between "junk" and "jonque" is not the sound at the end of the word. Rather, it is the vowel. The vowel in "jonque" is pronounced like the "a" in "father."
      I found my friend's comment a bit ignorant, as "jonque" is used in exactly the same way as "thing."

  • @marmite-land
    @marmite-land Před 2 měsíci

    Some notes about French :
    Chose (thing, object) effectively comes from Latin "Causa", but there is also "cause" which means the same thing it does in English.
    Machin (thingamajig, weird contraption) effectively comes from Latin "machina" but there's also machine, which means the same thing it does in English. It also used to mean "" ingenious play, imaginative plan or action" in ye olde times

  • @luizfellipe3291
    @luizfellipe3291 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Like how the word for "train" means "thing" in Minas Gerais' Brazilian Portuguese

  • @RafaelSouza-pr4gs
    @RafaelSouza-pr4gs Před 2 měsíci

    The first thing I thought of watching this, being from Brazil, is how some people from the state of Minas Gerais refer to abstract concepts or concrete "things" as "trem", our word for "train". Pretty much everywhere else in the country the word carries only its literal definition related to the locomotives, except for that one state. This video made me really wonder, for the first time, how that actually came to be...

  • @wisses1805
    @wisses1805 Před 2 měsíci +1

    So fascinating 😮 In Dutch there is the word „Lichaam“ and focuses more on the Body and Torso. So English, Dutch and German have the same origin but nowadays different meanings and usage.

  • @Lemonnitenite
    @Lemonnitenite Před 3 měsíci +2

    It may be yoke, but my brain keeps thinking yolk 🐌

  • @daveduvergier3412
    @daveduvergier3412 Před měsícem

    These evolutions suggest, strangely, that either our ancestors used different terms for 'thing' that have not survived, or that they did not feel the need a word for a vague unspecified referent.

  • @rianantony
    @rianantony Před 3 měsíci +3

    Alternate title: The origin of all "thing"s

  • @Kalobi
    @Kalobi Před měsícem +1

    this is fascinating. I had no idea "like" and "Leiche" were cognates

  • @profesordino
    @profesordino Před 3 měsíci +2

    several latin american dialects of spanish use cuestión, from quaestio, like romanian, to refer to things too!

  • @StepDub
    @StepDub Před měsícem

    Yoke in Hiberno-Irish is usually a bit more specific than thing. It would usually be used to refer to a gadget or tool of some kind.

  • @CoatedTrout
    @CoatedTrout Před 3 měsíci +2

    I wonder: were there words for 'thing' before these bleached ones took over? Were they bleached variants of even more ancient words? Something to look into.
    By the way, it isn't specifically complaining about the changing of meanings, but if you want to see Latin Grammarians being annoyed by the language changing, check out the 'Appendix Probi', a seventh century list of common latin mistakes that reveal the changing of latin into vulgar latin into (eventually) the Italian dialects.

  • @surelyijest
    @surelyijest Před měsícem

    The bit at the beginning about "item" coming from list entries reminds me of the etymology of the word "date." "Date" was Latin for "given," and when sending a letter, scribes would write "date" followed by the day, month and year it was given to the messenger. Eventually "date" came to mean the indication of day, month and year!
    And as for "data," that comes from the same word. In English, the set of underlying facts on which a theory, proof, or argument is based are called "data," or "givens."

    • @NakariSpeardane
      @NakariSpeardane  Před měsícem

      Oh I never knew that! I think that's going to be one of my new favourite etymologies.

  • @RisingRose
    @RisingRose Před 3 měsíci +5

    Nakari upload day is always a good day, but also, etymology my beloved!!!!
    Great video, awesome topic- the art you used for the opening and the one for the patreon credits looks v v cool btw

  • @lodewijk.
    @lodewijk. Před 3 měsíci +1

    this video's amazing and i love your art!! the effort you put into this shows and has paid off for sure

  • @Tavg123
    @Tavg123 Před 3 měsíci +1

    woah i just randomly got recommended this video, and it's great, loved it. this channel is super underrated 👍

  • @alexanderjoseph5380
    @alexanderjoseph5380 Před 2 měsíci

    In Maryland (and I think in other parts of the US), people sometimes use "joint" as a word for thing. It's also used to mean a place.

  • @margett__
    @margett__ Před 3 měsíci +1

    The visuals in this video are amazing 😍❤️ Love your style and colour choices!

  • @pptenshi3900
    @pptenshi3900 Před 3 měsíci +1

    The art and pacing and content of this video was stellar automatic sub !!!!!!

  • @umpoucodetudoealgumacoisa
    @umpoucodetudoealgumacoisa Před 3 měsíci +2

    An extremely common word for "thing" in certain parts of Brazil is "trem", which is literally train/locomotive :3

  • @xChasm
    @xChasm Před 3 měsíci +1

    This is a very underrated channel, the quality and interest of these videos are amazing! Please continue to make videos

  • @johnoconnor8238
    @johnoconnor8238 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Fascinating stuff and very well put together. More etymology videos please!

  • @StardustAnlia
    @StardustAnlia Před 2 měsíci

    In my conlang, which is basically proto world with future technology, the word for thing comes from an emotocon for a computer processor. In my conculture, food is 3D printed with atoms, but to save energy, non edible things are made simply by morphing the computer itself. They are referred to as computers or hilch’lg.

  • @andeve3
    @andeve3 Před měsícem

    The connection between "body/corpse" and the adjective "like" is intuitive (they are of the same body), the verb "to like" is less obvious, but makes sense along the lines of "that suits me" ("Ne liciaþ me lic!"). The word came to have a many concurrent meanings in other Germanic languages too:
    "Lik liker eg ikkje. Det er likare når folk er i live." ("I don't like corpses. It's better when people are alive.")

  • @zynphull
    @zynphull Před 2 měsíci

    Portuguese, Brazilian Portuguese to be specific, has a ton of funny words meaning not "thing" in particular (we have "coisa" for that) but generally "any object you don't remember the name of" - this includes "negócio" (business), "treco", "troço" (both likely come from the same root as "trunk" or piece of wood), "bagulho" (from Latin baculus, or cane, stick), and even my favourite, "trem" (literally TRAIN). We have even created the masculine-gendered version of "coisa" - "coiso", as my mum would often say - "cadê o coiso?" (where is it? / where's the thing?).
    Thanks for the awesome video :))

  • @kacperwoch4368
    @kacperwoch4368 Před 2 měsíci

    4:05 Now you mention it it's very interesting. We still say in Polish "rzeczyć" in the meaning of "to speak" and this term is everywhere in official and legal context but in most other contexts it means a thing or item but also sometimes a cause. It has a lot of meanings.
    As an example of a word for a thing that got "narrowed" it would be "wihajster" which today means a contraption, lever, something metal, something poking out but originally it simply ment a thing and its origin is German phrase "wie heist er" meaning "what is it called".

  • @notwithouttext
    @notwithouttext Před měsícem

    6:54 i see literally as very consistent meta hyperbole: you could say "everyone knows that" and be more accurate but weak with "virtually everyone knows that" and use hyperbole on that to get "literally everyone knows that"

  • @eatham.
    @eatham. Před 3 měsíci +2

    really lovely art on this one

  • @LegoSnakeproductions
    @LegoSnakeproductions Před měsícem

    In the Brazilian state of Minas Gerais the portuguese word for train (trem) has been thingified which is quite cool since trains are a very new concept so we know the thingification of the word must have started at the very latest in the mid 19th century

  • @joshadams8761
    @joshadams8761 Před měsícem

    Spanish has bleached “cosa” (“thing”) and unbleached “causa” (“case”). “Causa” also has the bleached meaning “cause”.

  • @DanielBerke
    @DanielBerke Před 2 měsíci

    Interesting! In Hawaii, the local dialect (Hawai'i Creole English) has the term "da kine" with a similar function as a placeholder for something familiar that you can't think of the word for at the moment: "Pass me da kine, you know da kine, on da kine, in front of da kine!"

  • @leoaraujo8590
    @leoaraujo8590 Před 2 měsíci

    In brazilian portuguese, specially the "mineiro" dialect. This "thingfication" happened to the word "train". And outsiders always find it funny af. "Hey, can you grab the train over there for me?".

  • @athenahagen5673
    @athenahagen5673 Před 2 měsíci +1

    This makes me curious if there are other language equivalents of "thingamajig" or "thingamabob" where you take a bleached word and sort of "re-dye" it with nonsense ...
    And also got me wondering about how this thingification relates to taboo and euphemism...
    The curiosity stokage is high - always the sign of a good vid! Thank you!

    • @ciarandoyle4349
      @ciarandoyle4349 Před 2 měsíci +2

      When in Ireland we wish to be less than precise, we sometimes say yokimabob!

  • @davecgriffith
    @davecgriffith Před 2 měsíci +1

    Fascinating!

  • @celsient
    @celsient Před 3 měsíci +1

    really well put together video! the illustration is beautiful & you're very engaging; looking forward to checking out the rest of your channel :D

  • @deithlan
    @deithlan Před 3 měsíci

    This video is absolutely incredible, I adored it

  • @BoogsterSugar
    @BoogsterSugar Před 3 měsíci +2

    In the Portuguese Miner Dialect from Southeastern Brazil we use the word "Trem" which literally means train as placeholder for things. So over here everything is a train 🚂 or should I say everytrain?

  • @lipamanka
    @lipamanka Před 3 měsíci +3

    this is a fantastic video

  • @esben181
    @esben181 Před 2 měsíci

    That's so cool that Like is related to corpse. In Danish a corpse is today called "et lig"

  • @Idkpleasejustletmechangeit
    @Idkpleasejustletmechangeit Před 2 měsíci +2

    In German you can also say "Scheißteil". Actually means "shit piece", but gets used to refer to anything that you view as awful. These types of insults are in a way a similar thing.

  • @figaeroth
    @figaeroth Před 3 měsíci +1

    oh my god this is an amazing video!! i have no idea how i've subscribed to you already but i LOVE IT! i love hearing about people's interests, and linguistics and how language evolves??? sign me UP! the pretty visuals help SO MUCH, too ... girls with short attention span... i love ur voice, too!!! it has that tone of excitement that keeps me engaged - and is clear you're enthusiastic about the topic!

  • @eliastandel
    @eliastandel Před měsícem

    In the Minas Gerais State of Brazil a very common word for thing is "trem", which means train.

  • @bibliophilecb
    @bibliophilecb Před 3 měsíci +3

    In the Washington, DC area I’ve noticed something similar to your grandmother’s “yoke.” There’s a regionalism here that I believe is mostly in the Black/AAVE community to call anything a “jawn” or “John.” I’m curious if it went through a linguistic bleaching by first referring to any person and then any thing?
    Major disclaimer, I’m neither originally from the DC area nor am I Black so I might be mistaken on how this word is exactly used!

    • @aLadNamedNathan
      @aLadNamedNathan Před měsícem

      I've never heard that--but I have heard something a bit similar.
      A friend of mine who had been in the navy complained about the blacks whom he met there using a word, "jonque," whenever they didn't know what something was called. I'm guessing "jonque" might be derived from "junk." (I invented my own spelling for it.) The difference in pronunciation between "junk" and "jonque" is not the sound at the end of the word. Rather, it is the vowel. The vowel in "jonque" is pronounced like the "a" in "father."
      I found my friend's comment a bit ignorant, as "jonque" is used in exactly the same way as "thing."

  • @worldbuildingjuice
    @worldbuildingjuice Před 3 měsíci +1

    Cool video. I love looking into etymologies of words & semantic drift words take over time. I say all the time my favorite website is wiktionary lol. Language evolution is one of the things that I love to ponder abt most in worldbuilding

  • @frogie-berries
    @frogie-berries Před 3 měsíci

    New favorite channel : D

  • @aramisortsbottcher8201
    @aramisortsbottcher8201 Před 3 měsíci +5

    Maybe the Irish were just ahead of their time and realized that things are a burden.

  • @mharley3791
    @mharley3791 Před 2 měsíci

    One common version in north east of the, mostly Philadelphia is the use of the word “jawn” Which can mean a person, place, thing, or an idea

  • @user-xc1fh5id1u
    @user-xc1fh5id1u Před 2 měsíci

    In Danish we are actually currently using the same word for 'corpse' = 'lig' and 'equal' = 'lig(e)'. However, I think context and grammar makes it quite easy to distinguish which meaning is used.

  • @eiknarfp6391
    @eiknarfp6391 Před 3 měsíci +2

    In Philadelphia English “Jawn” means thing and is even more broad than thing often is

  • @theskeletonposse6432
    @theskeletonposse6432 Před 3 měsíci

    the beige tones in this video are very pleasant. makes me want coffee

  • @o_enamuel
    @o_enamuel Před 3 měsíci +2

    please explain Brazilian "Trém" (lit. "train", "locomotive") which means "thing" in Minas Gerais and nearby regions

  • @fangjiunnewe3634
    @fangjiunnewe3634 Před 2 měsíci

    The word for thing in chinese is 東西, meaning literally east west. This is due to during the Tang Dynasty there were two large markets in the capital Chang'an, the East Market and the West Market, so when you went shopping you would buy east, buy west, buy east west (買東買西買東西).

  • @jjthepikazard212
    @jjthepikazard212 Před 3 měsíci +1

    v interesting. inspired me to work on my conlang. etymology is so cool

  • @aiedle007
    @aiedle007 Před měsícem

    To be honest. A good shortcut for learning another language is to pick one of the same linguistic family and understand what etymological differences are between the two as well as the linguistic changes in the targetlanguage. For example, the germanic constant shift. D's became T's and vice versa, in German dick constonant shifted becomes tick, sprinkle a little romance language into it and it becomes thick.