This Is Not A Bug

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  • čas přidán 12. 04. 2023
  • It’s common to call creepy crawlies bugs, but because entomologists refer to a specific class of insects as bugs, it’s wrong to call other things bugs - right?
    LEARN MORE
    **************
    To learn more about this topic, start your googling with these keywords:
    - Bug: a small insect, or an insect of a large order distinguished by having mouthparts that are modified for piercing and sucking.
    - Entomology: the branch of zoology concerned with the study of insects.
    - Etymology: the study of the origin of words and the way in which their meanings have changed throughout history.
    - Insect: a small arthropod animal that has six legs and generally one or two pairs of wings.
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    REFERENCES
    **************
    “Bug” Oxford English Dictionary.
    Wilton, D. (2020). “Bug (computer)”, www.wordorigins.org/big-list-...
    CSIRO Entomology, “Hemiptera - Bugs, Aphids, Cicadas.” www.ento.csiro.au/education/i...
    Hester, J. (1594). “The pearle of Practice, or Practisers pearle, for phisicke and chirurgie…”.
    Gibb, T. & Oseto, C. “How to Make an Awesome Insect Collection”, extension.entm.purdue.edu/401...
    MacNeal, D. (2017). “Bugged: The Insects Who Rule the World and the People Obsessed with Them”.
    Shakespeare, W. (1603). “Hamlet”.
    Winsor, M. (1976). “THE DEVELOPMENT of LINNAEAN INSECT CLASSIFICATION”. TAXON, vol. 25, no. 1, Feb. 1976, pp. 57-67, doi.org/10.2307/1220406
    Zinna, Robert, Assistant Professor of Biology at Mars Hill University. Personal Communication.
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Komentáře • 869

  • @MinuteEarth
    @MinuteEarth  Před rokem +116

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    • @pyeitme508
      @pyeitme508 Před rokem +2

      Lol

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      @coralmaynard4876 Před rokem +1

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      @Nathanael_Forlorn Před rokem +1

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    • @marcofilho
      @marcofilho Před rokem +1

      pls answer about international shipping! many of us are interested but unsure

    • @sarahjberman
      @sarahjberman Před rokem

      @@coralmaynard4876 yes, we can ship internationally! :)

  • @karendixon2250
    @karendixon2250 Před rokem +1678

    It's not a bug. It's a feature!

  • @robcandy9273
    @robcandy9273 Před rokem +553

    I'm from the UK and I know it's not a bug. It's some kind of bird

    • @jwinthepro
      @jwinthepro Před rokem +47

      Haha ladybird

    • @lakrids-pibe
      @lakrids-pibe Před rokem +16

      Mariehøne (Marie hen)

    • @BrotherAlpha
      @BrotherAlpha Před rokem +17

      I read somewhere that the Brits call it a Ladybird, because "bug" is too much like "buggery", which isn't ladylike. I don't know if that's 100% true, but it does sound very puritanical.

    • @AndrewACarmichael
      @AndrewACarmichael Před rokem +9

      ​@@BrotherAlpha I don't think so. It's to do with bird of Mary or something?

    • @RBernsCarter
      @RBernsCarter Před rokem +29

      Pillbugs too! Woodlice to us in the UK

  • @stefansauvageonwhat-a-twis1369

    I like using "bug" for any small critter of the sort, helps to not say insect incorrectly for spiders and stuff, while using "true bug" for, well, true bugs.

    • @BillySugger1965
      @BillySugger1965 Před rokem +13

      Why not use the word _thing_ for any old thing, just so you don’t have to bother getting the word right? 😂

    • @jimgsewell
      @jimgsewell Před rokem

      @@BillySugger1965 Perhaps because most people are neither entomologists nor pedantic jerks

    • @Niko__01
      @Niko__01 Před rokem +9

      I do the same thing

    • @genio2509
      @genio2509 Před rokem +14

      I just use bug for small critters be insects, arachnids, mollusks, and others. Insect for the "true bugs".
      And the same in Spanish, bicho for small critters and insecto for "true bugs".
      Before the video I didn't know bugs was a subcategory of insects.
      I will look if in Spanish too.
      Edit: Apparently not, bicho is free of confusion.

    • @thany3
      @thany3 Před rokem +10

      Same for fish. We tend to say fish, when we also include crab, lobster, shrimp, and eel. We could call it "seafood" but that might be too indicative of these animals being meant for food. And then what about lakefood and riverfood? It's just convenient to factor in other types of animals into a single colloquial word. Just like bugs.
      The most important point of language, is to get the message across. And by now, everyone roughly knows what a bug is. If you try to be overly correct, you're just making it confusing again, defeating the whole point of using spoken colloquial language.

  • @mediumfast
    @mediumfast Před rokem +472

    I love the way you included the fact that using the word "bug" colloquially is totally okay. This is exactly the kind of communication we need between the scientific community and the general public. We live in a world where there so much gatekeeping and condescension toward people who don't know something, and it's time to be more inclusive and encouraging.

    • @dahuntre
      @dahuntre Před rokem

      ^^^

    • @osmia
      @osmia Před rokem

      +

    • @shmooveyea
      @shmooveyea Před rokem

      Science needs _far_ _less_ "aCkKkTuAaLLyyYy" folks then it currently has.

    • @IHateUniqueUsernames
      @IHateUniqueUsernames Před rokem +13

      That's what one aspect of language is - a tool. The general public can use it as they have consensus on, while the *specific* scientific can have it's own definition. However, they need to be aware who they are communicating with and clarify potentially ambiguous/confusing terms as needed. There are times where the specificity of the language is beneficial to adhere to continue on a topic.

    • @Alex__Size
      @Alex__Size Před rokem +22

      Not to mention the fact that it sounds like “bug” was originally in the colloquial language, and was co-opted by the scientific community as a convenient term for a specific subset of species; since the colloquial came first, I am inclined to argue that it is more correct than the entomologists’ interpretation

  • @adventuresinportland3032
    @adventuresinportland3032 Před rokem +169

    This is my first time actually hearing that bug is an actual scientific term. I always thought it was just a slang term for all little invertebrates.

    • @gjvnq
      @gjvnq Před rokem +15

      Same situation here. In fact I always thought that bug was a broad term that included all insects instead of a subtype of insects.

    • @NG-we8uu
      @NG-we8uu Před rokem +3

      Le bugge

    • @firewoodloki
      @firewoodloki Před 11 měsíci +3

      The scientist should really come up with their own name and stop stealing our words!!

    • @sqlexp
      @sqlexp Před 5 měsíci

      Those scientards believe they own the language(s).

    • @andressigalat602
      @andressigalat602 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@firewoodloki They have their own name, "hemiptera", they should stick to it and leave the common words for everyday conversation.

  • @johannaverplank4858
    @johannaverplank4858 Před rokem +38

    I honestly didn’t know “bug” was an actual category of insect. I just thought it was a colloquial name for insects in general. Thanks for educating me!

  • @manchest_hair_united1161
    @manchest_hair_united1161 Před rokem +61

    Recently learned that one of my colleague is an insectophile...
    I'm shocked really, never seemed like a guy who would bed bugs.

  • @sandpiperbf9767
    @sandpiperbf9767 Před rokem +51

    I always say that the popular use of the word "bug" basically means arthropod and am happy to call crabs ocean bugs

    • @davidtitanium22
      @davidtitanium22 Před rokem +5

      And shrimps are ocean cockroach

    • @mk_rexx
      @mk_rexx Před rokem +2

      @@davidtitanium22 Which is honestly tiring to hear/read because that factoid is just made to gross people out. There are a whole lot of varieties of shrimp and while some are indeed scavengers, most are generalists and some are filter feeders too.
      You could say "shrimp are [any arthropod] of the sea" and it would most likely be just as meaningless.

    • @davidtitanium22
      @davidtitanium22 Před rokem +3

      @@mk_rexx and it's funny because it is meaningless

    • @NG-we8uu
      @NG-we8uu Před rokem

      Crabs are not only to be found in oceans

    • @whome9842
      @whome9842 Před 5 měsíci

      It is more about the fact that insects are a subgroup of crustaceans. A lobster is closely related to a butterfly than to a horseshoe crab.

  • @sisi7304
    @sisi7304 Před rokem +151

    The computer “bug” term came from actually having a moth getting stuck in circuits of computers that filled rooms, so that also tracks for the linguistic development of the word too!

    • @bjs301
      @bjs301 Před rokem +4

      Thank you. That is the only interesting thing about this video.

    • @Samuel-7418
      @Samuel-7418 Před rokem +8

      Ok I didn't know this. Some words are just used very frequently, but never questioned; just accepted. Thanks for the interesting comment!

    • @spartan0x75
      @spartan0x75 Před rokem +36

      That's actually an urban legend. The word "bug" was used for computer program problems before Grace Hopper found a moth that caused a bug in the system and she joked about the bug being an actual bug. At least this is what I remember from my CS classes, so please do fact check me :)

    • @juliasophical
      @juliasophical Před rokem +30

      Not exactly true. The moth in the computer at Harvard in 1947 is often celebrated as the world's first *literal* computer bug, but the use of the term "bug" by engineers to refer to problems with their systems predates it by at least half a century. It's not the source of the term, just an amusing anecdote about a bug being a literal bug, made famous by the correspondence of the already in-use metaphorical term with its literal counterpart.

    • @bjs301
      @bjs301 Před rokem +7

      @@spartan0x75 interesting that her name was Hopper.

  • @Aloddff
    @Aloddff Před rokem +61

    I didn’t know you called them ladybugs
    We call them ladybirds in the UK

    • @aname4931
      @aname4931 Před rokem +25

      Came here to say this. If someone doesn't like 'ladybug', they're definitely not going to like the word 'ladybird'

    • @cloudkitt
      @cloudkitt Před rokem +11

      Which is surely even less accurate :P

    • @darkseraph2009
      @darkseraph2009 Před rokem +5

      I call them ladybeetles.

    • @user-xj6jj6cd7j
      @user-xj6jj6cd7j Před rokem +3

      It's

    • @hircenedaelen
      @hircenedaelen Před rokem +1

      @@user-xj6jj6cd7j small red cow in mine

  • @robblake8999
    @robblake8999 Před rokem +33

    in the uk we call "ladybugs" ladybirds, which is even odder!

    • @jwinthepro
      @jwinthepro Před rokem +8

      They do this in the UK because, in the olden days, people referred to ladybugs as “beetle of our Lady,” so called because Virgin Mary was often depicted as wearing red.

    • @whome9842
      @whome9842 Před 5 měsíci +1

      So they might not be bugs or birds but they definitely are ladies. Jokes aside in old times these terms were used differently from today. For example bees were described as being birds while crabs, dolphins, octopus, etc were all fish.

  • @Naidnapurugavihs
    @Naidnapurugavihs Před rokem +147

    As an aspiring biologist, I am really impressed by how you guys are able to elucidate unique and fundamental concepts in simple and captivating ways yet you still maintain perfect scientific accuracy ❤❤❤

    • @Octochiken
      @Octochiken Před rokem

      elucidate?

    • @jwinthepro
      @jwinthepro Před rokem +1

      @@Octochiken synonymous with explain/describe

    • @jwinthepro
      @jwinthepro Před rokem +3

      With all due respect, many scientists refrain from using fancy vocabulary so as to communicate effectively. One of the most important things in science is communicating our findings to the public, so we use simple words!

    • @Octochiken
      @Octochiken Před rokem +2

      @@jwinthepro I'm just saying there's no need to overcomplicate your sentences.

    • @intruder9127
      @intruder9127 Před rokem

      @@Octochiken i agree

  • @KnowArt
    @KnowArt Před rokem +9

    This last sentence is really important. Informal language is not precise, but very clear! As communicators we should rarely be precise _at the expense of_ being clear. Although many if not most of the times they go hand in hand.

  • @JacekJurewicz
    @JacekJurewicz Před rokem +14

    In Polish it's even worse, we use the word "robak" (worm) for any insect (or isopod, etc.) that crawls (rather than flies), or maybe even those that can fly, but are crawling at the moment.

    • @EdKolis
      @EdKolis Před rokem +2

      Meanwhile back in English land, "wyrm" means dragon and not an actual worm...

    • @viamedia2704
      @viamedia2704 Před rokem +2

      ​@@EdKolisit did mean an actual worm as well though, it's ultimately from a Proto Indo-European root and is cognate with the Latin "vermis" (worm), where you ultimately get the name of your vermicelli pasta from.

    • @EdKolis
      @EdKolis Před rokem +1

      @@viamedia2704 mmm, worms! How to eat fried worms, though?

  • @IllidanS4
    @IllidanS4 Před rokem +27

    I'd definitely just call them "features". As for the specific beetle, that's a "ladybird" to me!

    • @adrianblake8876
      @adrianblake8876 Před rokem +7

      And yet, it's not a bird, so it's even wierder...

  • @cerosis
    @cerosis Před rokem +64

    Pill bugs? I believe you mean roly poly

  • @TomHPMc
    @TomHPMc Před rokem +29

    Intersting vid on both etymology and entomology! People often confuse the two, which bugs me in ways I can't put into words.

  • @hiddeqel5172
    @hiddeqel5172 Před rokem +9

    It's interesting that Carl Linnaeus was mentioned. Carl Linnaeus went twice to England but we do not know how much English he knew. He wrote down almost everything in Latin. .
    Linnaeus divided the arthropods into three main groups: Insecta (insects), Arachnida (spiders, scorpions, and their relatives), and Crustacea (crabs, lobsters, and their relatives).
    He subdivided Insecta in 7 orders of which one: Hemiptera.
    This term was later translated as bugs in English.
    So while the word "bug" is sometimes used to refer to Hemiptera, it was not a term used by Linnaeus or in his original classification system.
    So it's not so much Linnaeus himself, but rather the English translators that wanted to connect this Latin term with one used in English.

    • @rdreher7380
      @rdreher7380 Před rokem +5

      Thank you. I wanted this clarified, as it was clear to me that something was being misleadingly simplified. It occurred to right away to think: why would Linnaeus, a Swede writing in Latin use the English word "bug?!"

    • @hiddeqel5172
      @hiddeqel5172 Před rokem +2

      @@rdreher7380 Glad to have helped, the simple answer is: he didn't 😉.
      But taxology, language and translation is always a mess because the cultural "taxology" often precedes the scientific taxology in combination that different languages/culture have different "taxologies". E.g. A jellyfish is no fish, and a walvis (dutch for whale) is also no vis (fish). And even the scientific taxology changes, therefore it's great that the latin names are scientifically used as a point of reference.

    • @spliceosome
      @spliceosome Před rokem +4

      Thank you! This kind of makes the whole premise pointless, as bug was never a scientific definition. My guess is they knew that but chose to ignore it. It's an interesting video nonetheless, but it is misleading...

  • @TrailRat2000
    @TrailRat2000 Před rokem +11

    In the UK we call them Ladybirds. I don't know if this helps or not.

  • @gamechep
    @gamechep Před rokem +12

    We call them Ladybirds or the Ladybird Beetle in India. I love the black dots on the red shell, feels like a miniature painting ❤

  • @veranet99
    @veranet99 Před rokem +7

    I never thought of the word "bug" as a scientific term. I always saw it as it is typically used - a generalized word for multilegged critter.

    • @jwinthepro
      @jwinthepro Před rokem +1

      Even then most entomologists just refer to true bugs as Hemipterans, so it’s still not that scientific

  • @yourlocalengineer
    @yourlocalengineer Před rokem +18

    I think the best way to think of this is as two similar languages: common english and biology english. The language structures are the same, but the word meanings (and even what words are present) may differ
    Sort of like when an engineer talks about their work to an accountant, they might be asked to speak english afterwards

    • @JNCressey
      @JNCressey Před rokem +7

      The accountant measures work in manhours.
      The engineer measures work in watthours.

    • @Kevin-cf9nl
      @Kevin-cf9nl Před rokem +3

      It s a classic case of jargon

  • @AndyfromWrexham
    @AndyfromWrexham Před rokem +5

    I need to clarify that the ones in Britain we call Ladybirds are the ones that are red with black spots and have wings folded under a hard shell

    • @AndyfromWrexham
      @AndyfromWrexham Před rokem +3

      Just like the one in your picture thumbnail

    • @andressigalat602
      @andressigalat602 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Exactly the same ones that are called "ladybugs" in American English.

  • @Cythil
    @Cythil Před rokem +19

    I wonder if they were really called bugs by Carl Linnaeus, since he was a Swedish Botanist (and a few other things) and would likely have mainly use Latin and Swedish. And the Swedish word for True Bug are nothing like Bug. But it would not surprise me if he also did communicate in English from time to time. Daniel Solander was one of his disciples, and he was instrumental in Cook's famous expedition. Maybe someone else knows more about this than I do?

    • @hiddeqel5172
      @hiddeqel5172 Před rokem +8

      This is actually a very good point, he wrote mainly in Latin and this problem arose only afterwards when his works were translated into English. I explained this in another comment.

    • @pawzir
      @pawzir Před rokem +3

      There's no word like bug in Swedish. There's "insekt" for insects (and also arachnids). The genetic word "kryp" (related to creeper) is nonspecific for small animal with many legs.

  • @fionahurley5546
    @fionahurley5546 Před rokem +6

    The "lady" part of ladybug (or ladybird in British English) comes from "Our Lady" (as in Mary, mother of Jesus).
    This connection with Mary is also found in the German "Marienkäfer" (Mary's beetle) and the Danish "Mariehøne" (Mary's hen).
    Whereas in both Irish and Russian it's "God's little cow" ("bóín Dé" / "bozhya korovka").

    • @andressigalat602
      @andressigalat602 Před 4 měsíci +1

      In Spanish is "mariquita", and I think it originally also made reference to the Vingin Mary, although in modern slang it has come to mean "sissy-boy".

    • @dilmarago
      @dilmarago Před 2 měsíci

      Joaninha (little/small Joana) in Portuguese, at least in Brazilian Portuguese

  • @lateoclock4281
    @lateoclock4281 Před rokem +4

    They really committed "Entomological Etymology". I love this channel.

  • @mikaelfoster9726
    @mikaelfoster9726 Před rokem +2

    The fact some people don't know the difference between entomology and etymology bugs me in a way I can't put into words.

  • @tigrafale4610
    @tigrafale4610 Před rokem +3

    Thanks for supplying me more ammunition for when I'm declaring "ladybird" as the correct word.

  • @ASMTrendingz
    @ASMTrendingz Před rokem +12

    The world's smallest bug is a tiny insect called the fairy-fly. Fairy-flies are incredibly small, with some species measuring only 0.2 millimeters in length. These bugs are so small that they are often mistaken for specks of dust or grains of sand. Despite their small size, fairyflies are important predators of other insects and can be found all over the world, living in a variety of habitats including forests, grasslands, and even urban environments. So beware of fairy-flies guys

    • @jwinthepro
      @jwinthepro Před rokem +4

      Ironically enough, they technically aren’t flies! The same applies to fireflies and lightning bugs 😂

    • @sirk603
      @sirk603 Před rokem +1

      @@jwintheprofireflies and lightning bugs are different?

    • @jwinthepro
      @jwinthepro Před rokem +3

      @@sirk603 no, they’re the same thing. But they are neither flies nor bugs. They are beetles, of family Lampyridae

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Před rokem +2

      Sounds like what I learned as “thunder flies” growing up. Extremely tiny specks, look like dirt, but on closer inspection are tiny creatures. One of my family homes had a bunch of them getting stuck in picture frames, behind the glass!

    • @jessehunter362
      @jessehunter362 Před rokem +2

      @@kaitlyn__L Those are actually thrips, a close relative of true bugs! Fairy flies are a type of parasitoid wasp.

  • @TJ-vh2ps
    @TJ-vh2ps Před rokem +3

    I have been waiting my entire life for “entomological etymology” to be used in a real sentence. THANK YOU!! 🥰😘❤

  • @CorrectFossa
    @CorrectFossa Před rokem +3

    The day I recognized language as a living, changing thing, and acknowledged that common names don’t need to make sense is the day I became happy

  • @Zorae42
    @Zorae42 Před rokem +5

    Excuse you, computer glitches are called "bugs" because one of the first glitches was caused by a moth getting trapped in a relay.

  • @Andersl201
    @Andersl201 Před rokem +5

    You would really hate the name for ladybug in norwegian. "Marihøne", Mari is based on virgin Mary and høne is a chicken. You also have summer bird (butterfly is "sommerfugl" in norwegian) and probably many other strangely named creatures. Also we generally use the word "bille" for everything crawling on the ground and insect for everything flying around.

    • @hakanstorsater5090
      @hakanstorsater5090 Před rokem +2

      The "summerbird" name also exists in Danish and Yiddish, so it probably entered Scandinavia through Low German and originated in some continental German variety... (Swedish has "fjäril", which I think originally might have meant something like "little flutterer", the similarity to "fjäder" (feather) is probably coincidental...)

    • @duckgirl6792
      @duckgirl6792 Před 9 měsíci +2

      how do i pronounce any of this?

  • @DrDeFord
    @DrDeFord Před rokem +20

    It may not be a bug, but it’s definitely not a bird.

    • @1Cr0w
      @1Cr0w Před rokem

      And yet, is it not airborne by its own accord, like the birdes are of theirs?

  • @micahphilson
    @micahphilson Před rokem +3

    I would love a video like this about Berries!
    So few things called berries are actually berries. But watermelons, cucumbers, squash, and even pumpkins are!

  • @ultradude5410
    @ultradude5410 Před rokem +4

    There’s something to be said about the conflicting goals of being easily understood by normal people and being pedantically correct, and there’s always a tradeoff

  • @wellurban
    @wellurban Před rokem +5

    I think it’s much less common outside the US to call all creepy-crawlies “bugs”. I don’t think most people I’d know would refer to a fly or wasp or dragonfly as a bug, though they might use that term (incorrectly) for beetles.

    • @pawel198812
      @pawel198812 Před rokem +2

      Is that meaning of the word 'bug' limited to American and Canadian English?

  • @imafrog4
    @imafrog4 Před rokem +1

    In Australia, we call them either ladybirds or ladybeetles, depending on which part of the country you're from. I'd never heard the term ladybug till A Bug's Life came out.

  • @turmunkhganbaatar2515
    @turmunkhganbaatar2515 Před rokem +1

    Fun fact The Mongolian equivalent horhoi can be used for snakes and worms which leads to the death worm which is actually a basalisk like snake originally

  • @Tinil0
    @Tinil0 Před rokem +4

    Weirdly as a lay person I've had this on my mind way too often all things considered. The problem is that the term "bug" for "small creepy crawly" is just so dang useful. It's inclusive of so much that seemingly "go together", like insects and spiders and isopods, and that I can't think of any better term for. I always just say "true bug" if I mean bug in a scientific sense which works for me, "true bug" and "bug" just being completely different classifications for animals in my mind.

  • @plumpengu
    @plumpengu Před rokem +3

    i (an aspiring entomologist) have this conversation with a friend at least once a week. really neat to know the origin of the word in both a scientific and colloquial sense now!

  • @MegaMinerd
    @MegaMinerd Před rokem +20

    Hey I was just discussing this exact question with someone last week. Now I can share a well researched answer. (We hadn't concluded to anything solid)
    Looks like the video went in the opposite direction of discussion. We basically agreed we'd use the term bug for insects, arachnids, isopods, myriapods and probably other groups of terrestrial arthropods.

    • @genio2509
      @genio2509 Před rokem +5

      I just use bug as a direct translation of bicho, wich is any kind of critter.
      In Spanish, the hemiptera aren't called by a normal name. And individual ones like bedbug (ácaro), ladybug (mariquita), stinkbug (chinche) are bug free.
      So during learning I just stuck using bug as bicho, even if it is incorrect on English.
      PS: Google translate says bicho is bug.

    • @dilmarago
      @dilmarago Před 2 měsíci

      In Brazil we use the word bicho for small critters, but it is also used as a synonim for animal (written as in English, but with different pronunciation). We have the word percevejo for Hemiptera

  • @TheRealE.B.
    @TheRealE.B. Před rokem +1

    I've been doing this backwards my entire life. I didn't even know that "bug" had a scientific definition and thought it was a mere vernacular term for any creepy-crawly thing and was thus the more general term.
    A half-remembered Bill Nye episode may have been involved.

  • @NikozBG
    @NikozBG Před rokem +1

    Ah interesting. Reminds me of the "berry" conundrum. Honestly in English a lot of things are like that which makes it really confusing for a non-native speaker.

  • @AutumnReel4444
    @AutumnReel4444 Před rokem +2

    I have never once had someone say "bug" and mean "insect". Everyone uses it to mean "creepy crawly little guy" which includes worms, spiders, slugs, etc.

    • @jwinthepro
      @jwinthepro Před rokem

      In general though, you’re not going to walk up to a worm and call it a bug. You’d call it a worm. You’d also call a snail a snail, not a bug. We call insects bugs either because it has less syllables or simply because the word bug preceded insects.

  • @Nayru...
    @Nayru... Před rokem +18

    Huh, interesting. In German, colloquial anything creepy crawling gets called "Insekt", even if it isn't.
    If you translate "bug" to German, most of the time you get "Käfer" (also the other way around), which does refer to Coleoptera, not Hemiptera (which would be "Schnabelkerfe", which isn't a commonly used word). So the ladybug isn't a bug, but (in German) the Marienkäfer is a Käfer... :D Weird.
    PS: I never ever use "Insekt" for a non-Insekt, and I correct anyone, that does so. Yes, I'm so fun at partys.. 😂

    • @elnino7153
      @elnino7153 Před rokem +6

      I wanted to write a similar comment. You make some slightly wrong statements in your comment. The word "bug" translates to "Wanze" and the word "beetle" translates to "Käfer". So in german the ladybug (in german: "Marienkäfer" [Käfer = Beetle]) is labeled correctly as a beetle.

    • @Nayru...
      @Nayru... Před rokem +2

      @@elnino7153 I mean, I know, that bug would correctly translate to Wanze, or better to Schnabelkerf, but every translator I tried translated it to Käfer or even Insekt. Which one do you use?

    • @1Cr0w
      @1Cr0w Před rokem

      @@Nayru... Wiktionary correctly lists "Wanze" as a translation of "bug"; though "Laus" can also be a correct translation, depending on the species (aphids = Blattläuse). I have never encountered anyone who referred to a true bug as a "Käfer".
      "Insekt" occupies a semi-scientific space, as it is a transaprently latin(ate) word, however without a native equivalent.

  • @checkmate1284
    @checkmate1284 Před rokem +1

    Using the word “bug” to describe a glitch originated when a small moth flew into a computer and caused an error. The moth was removed (debugged) and the program produced the expected output. Keep in mind that computers at this time were really large and a moth could easily fly into one.

  • @joshuagardner4095
    @joshuagardner4095 Před rokem +4

    I think you're going about this the wrong way. Instead of trying to get 332 million Americans (and more beyond the US who might say "ladybug") to say something different, just get the 35k biologists to ditch the term "bug" as anything within the scientific lexicon. It's Linnaeus's fault, not everyone else's.

  • @memocvfl
    @memocvfl Před rokem +4

    I love watching your videos, you still give informative videos, like he one about orchids that you published years ago.

  • @CoolJosh3k
    @CoolJosh3k Před rokem +1

    Makes me think of words like “hack” or “electrocute”.
    Even dictionaries now use the common, but technically incorrect definition.

  • @MaxArceus
    @MaxArceus Před rokem +1

    I always use "bug" for all small exoskeleton having creatures, including spiders and centipedes, while "insecect" is only for the.. well.. insects.

  • @tyrant-den884
    @tyrant-den884 Před rokem +1

    "A part of me wants to call it a ladybug, but it's not."
    Large parts of the world: "That's cause it's a BIRD!"

  • @triprpc01
    @triprpc01 Před rokem +1

    I loved the opening Bug Pun. It bugged me.

  • @quercus56
    @quercus56 Před rokem +2

    In the UK, we call them labybirds (of course, they aren't birds either!) and pill bug is pill louse to distinguish it from a woodlouse, not sure louse is much better either! I also prefer minibeasts to creepy crawlies as it is a more positive term.

  • @adelineparinduri
    @adelineparinduri Před rokem

    In our city gardening group, which is founded and run by an entomologist, every time someone asks about ladybugs, he'd answer by the term "lady beetle." Of course, no one seems to get the hint 😅

  • @noone3708
    @noone3708 Před rokem

    3:23 i like how you can hear the restraint.

  • @aeyelashbug6311
    @aeyelashbug6311 Před rokem +1

    I had no idea crustaceans and insects were more closely related to eachother than they were to arachnids. I thought insects and arachnids would be close and then crustaceans would be a completely different part of arthropods.

  • @ThePiachu
    @ThePiachu Před rokem

    The "mechanical glitch" use of the word "bug" doesn't come form it being haunting, but from the first computer bug - the 1947 moth that caused an issue in a computer hardware. It's just a weird word that caught on in the computer space, like sharding (that came from Ultima Online), etc.

  • @PiotrekR-aka-Szpadel
    @PiotrekR-aka-Szpadel Před rokem

    The origin of the term "bug" in computers dates back to the early days of computing when a moth was found trapped in a relay, causing the system to malfunction. Since then, the term has evolved and is now used to describe any issue that causes a program to behave incorrectly or produce unintended results.
    Also term debugging was fairly literal in early days.

  • @dr0g_Oakblood
    @dr0g_Oakblood Před 5 měsíci

    3:07 - IIRC the reason a computer bug is called a bug is back in the early days of vacuum tubes, a literal bug crawled into the machine and caused issues.

  • @0OB08O
    @0OB08O Před rokem

    In Portuguese we never called insects by "bug", only the word for "insect" is used for insects and other things are called by other words, but we adopted the word "bug" for digital bugs.

  • @ML-fc3je
    @ML-fc3je Před rokem +1

    I saw the thumbnail and I was drawn to wanting to know more. Now that I know more I will do join mobile infantry to see what other bugs I can find.

  • @randomname285
    @randomname285 Před rokem +1

    can't believe you got through this full video without sneaking in a Pokemon reference

  • @finalbarrage7108
    @finalbarrage7108 Před rokem +5

    The word "bug" in the computer world actually has its own very interesting story.
    A long while ago while computers were mechanical, and at the size of entire rooms, a computer stopped working, and when the engineers went inside to try and fix it, they found a bug stuck in a cog. Removing that bug solved the problem, so they labled that process "debugging". As in, literally removing a bug. This is where a "bug" in the glitch sense got its name

    • @Stitchez_YT
      @Stitchez_YT Před rokem +2

      *The more you know*
      ✨✨✨✨✨✨💫

    • @kruks
      @kruks Před rokem +6

      This isn't correct, but rather is an anecdote from the early days of computing ("First actual case of bug being found."). The term "bug" in engineering predates both mechanical and digital computing; Thomas Edison referred to the colloquialism in the 1870's - most famously in a letter from 1878 where he admits it's not a literal insect - and he was not the first to use the term either.
      More likely the usage was simply was born from the idea of a bug as a small but effective irritant, as software bugs can be small yet irritating too. But the 1947 story is cute.

  • @monkeypie8701
    @monkeypie8701 Před rokem +1

    Bar challenge: Take a sip each time he says bug

  • @Pingwn
    @Pingwn Před rokem

    I didn't know bug had a technological definition, I thought it was just a general word for small critters, especially arthropods.

  • @robert-andreiionita2827
    @robert-andreiionita2827 Před rokem +4

    …it’s a feature.

  • @rotinoma
    @rotinoma Před rokem +3

    now do one for germs

  • @bosstowndynamics5488
    @bosstowndynamics5488 Před rokem +1

    The history of the word bug just reinforces my belief that, in common English, it is entirely fair to call a spider a bug

  • @appa609
    @appa609 Před rokem +4

    I remember when Minute meant one minute. This video could have been one minute without any loss of content.

    • @juliasophical
      @juliasophical Před rokem +1

      I guess their overly verbose presentation *bugs* you, eh?

  • @clowdde
    @clowdde Před rokem +1

    I don't watch the videos of this channel enough, they're... good food for the soul and the mind

  • @kingcookie4714
    @kingcookie4714 Před rokem

    The word "bug" for computer problems came from an event in 1946 where a computer problem was caused by a moth crawling into a relay. Since then, the word has stuck around.

  • @danielmalinen6337
    @danielmalinen6337 Před rokem +1

    In Finland, a ladybug is called a "leppäkerttu" or "läppäpirko", even though it is not bloody and neither is St. Bridget of Sweden, and St. Bridget of Sweden was never bloody and has nothing to do with ladybugs.
    ( In Finnic languages, "leppä" was the old word for blood alongside world "veri" and in Finland alder is called "leppä" because it is "a tree that bleeds when wounded". )

  • @PANZER7910
    @PANZER7910 Před rokem

    Mum: You found the bug yet? Jimmy?
    Scientist: Yeah, I do, but I dont.

  • @bcjmythical9576
    @bcjmythical9576 Před rokem

    bug: *keeps being misused entemology*
    fly: *nervous sweating*

  • @aierisfrost8447
    @aierisfrost8447 Před rokem

    Tiny critter that has many legs and wierd segment bits is bug to me

  • @rayyaninspookymonth1630
    @rayyaninspookymonth1630 Před rokem +1

    Some bug-types in Pokémon: lol

  • @HayTatsuko
    @HayTatsuko Před rokem

    Bugs are a very specific kind of insect that has sucking mouthparts. Ladybird beetles, on the other hand, are fantastic predators that can mow through a mass of aphids like nobody's business, and that's why farmers love them (and so do I).

  • @elitemaster666
    @elitemaster666 Před rokem

    I think this happens all the time. Examples in medicine include the word "leg" which refers to the segment of the lower extremity between the knee and ankle vs "thigh" above. Kind of a counterpart to "forearm". Most people just use leg to refer to the entire lower extremity, even physicians.
    "Bug" coloquially is nigh synonymous with insect (as searching in Wikipedia will redirect you there) and 'true bugs' to the Hemiptera order. Just my 2 cents on this, as a physician.

  • @Pottery4Life
    @Pottery4Life Před rokem

    I had no idea that the word "bug" was that important. Thank you for the clarification.

  • @caygesinnett6474
    @caygesinnett6474 Před rokem

    This is a good example of why scientists should give technical definitions to technical words and not try to use ordinary words

  • @falcoskywolf
    @falcoskywolf Před měsícem

    I was under the impression that "bug" was the informal term for the wider category that includes insects and other land arthropods. "All insects are bugs but not all bugs are insects." That's what my "dad" and teachers used.

  • @warricksmythevideo
    @warricksmythevideo Před rokem +1

    As in the UK and India, in Australia they are called ladybirds. Maybe just to confuse children. Either way I still use them in my apps as an icon to report a bug because they pretty 🐞

  • @rextanglr4056
    @rextanglr4056 Před rokem +2

    I mean, shellfish, cuttlefish, starfish, crayfish, and jellyfish aren't actually fish, so...

  • @SRFriso94
    @SRFriso94 Před rokem

    Fun fact: the term 'bug' in computer science comes from Harvard, when, on a good day in 1946, one of the computers there had an error. After going over the wiring by hand, because that was the only way to do it back then, they found a moth trapped in one of the relays. The term had been used before in engineering, but that's where it comes from in computer programs.

  • @Ninegauger
    @Ninegauger Před rokem

    All those are bugs to me: Worms, snails, spiders, insects, and pillbugs. Scientists are talking about a subgroup of insects and I’m talking about a variety of small basically unrelated creatures. Love it!

  • @LavenderLushLuxury
    @LavenderLushLuxury Před rokem +2

    I love, Lady Bug's 🐞🐛🧪

  • @Pandacalifornia
    @Pandacalifornia Před 3 měsíci

    “Ladybug is clearly misleading. LadyBIRD is more taxonomically appropriate.” -some scientist probably

  • @samiral-hayed1656
    @samiral-hayed1656 Před rokem

    I like to keep technical taxonomy separate from casual conversation. Flies might not scientifically be bugs, but if a kid asks me what a fly is, I'll say 'a type of bug.'

  • @floramew
    @floramew Před rokem +2

    ...huh. wild, I grew up with the idea that 'bug' was not a scientific term, and was mostly vibes-based, the way 'fish' is impossible to define. Most, but not all, people I know would say worms aren't bugs, but that spiders, isopods, etc are. I think snails were usually the... Fence mark? Iirc, most weren't sure if they counted as bugs.
    So it's wild to hear that insects aren't a subcategory of bugs, but the other way around.

    • @BillySugger1965
      @BillySugger1965 Před rokem

      What’s wrong with fish? Aquatic vertebrate. And in modern phylogeny, one never outlives ancestral clades, that means we’re fish too.

  • @olorin4317
    @olorin4317 Před 6 měsíci

    Bug is simply the best word for small creepy crawlies, so naturally it took over as the common nomenclature.

  • @dragorphis1
    @dragorphis1 Před rokem

    I mean, in the UK we call it a “ladybird” which is a bit further off than mis-naming it a bug…

  • @lunerwerewolf
    @lunerwerewolf Před rokem

    Fun fact: Ladybug is actually shorthand the actual name for this beetle is Ladybird beetle

  • @kingofdefense
    @kingofdefense Před rokem +1

    A scientist trying to use a very vague word as a group name sounds like a skill issue to me.

  • @be7th
    @be7th Před rokem

    Tree... Fish... now Bug? Ah, how the world has words worlds apart.

  • @darrelllancaster9554
    @darrelllancaster9554 Před rokem

    Very informative. Thank You. 🎯

  • @logosimian
    @logosimian Před rokem

    Technical language frequently needs to be different not only from colloquial language, but even from technical language in other fields.
    This something to be aware of, but not bothered by.

  • @bartje321
    @bartje321 Před rokem

    In the Netherlands we call them "lieveheersbeestje" litteraly translated as "dear gods little beast"

  • @StormgemThunder
    @StormgemThunder Před rokem

    As someone who's really into snakes, the disconnect between taxonomical classification and common names is definitely someththing I'm familiar with.
    For example, there's the viperid north american copperhead, the elapid (like cobras, taipans, mambas, sea kraita) australian copperhead, the south asian colubrid (a lot of common, mostly harmless snakes like gopher snakes, hognose snakes and grass snakes) copperhead rat snake, and the chinese viperid copperhead.
    Australia also has elapid death adders, while most snakes called adders are vipers, or the elapid african garter snakes vs the colubrid north american garter snakes, or how some snakes are called pythons or boas while not being from said families, eg the calabar python which is actually a boa.
    And of course, king cobras not actually being true cobras, and are more closely related to mambas (black mambas actually have a neck flap)

    • @dilmarago
      @dilmarago Před 2 měsíci

      In Portuguese, "cobra" is any kind of snake. We also have the word "serpente", but is not so used in everyday conversation.