Can you solve this first grade homework problem?

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  • čas přidán 3. 06. 2024
  • How would you answer this?
    0:00 problem
    1:27 silver
    3:17 poll
    4:09 friend
    4:51 egg
    5:20 toothbrush
    5:47 desk
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Komentáře • 3,7K

  • @YoungGandalf2325
    @YoungGandalf2325 Před 5 měsíci +2881

    My first thought was that there is no right or wrong answer. The problem is just to see how well a student is able to explain and justify their choice.

    • @1CO1519
      @1CO1519 Před 5 měsíci +75

      I thought the same thing

    • @FlyingFox86
      @FlyingFox86 Před 5 měsíci +75

      Exactly my thought as well. I'm sure you could give reasoning for any of the answers.
      My first instinct was silver, because silver is a material, the others are things that can be made out of materials. Though "silver" can also refer to a silver coin.
      Continuing the video now, I'm curious.
      Edit: yeah!

    • @pradeepsekar
      @pradeepsekar Před 5 měsíci +50

      I thought so too... Friend - Because all others are inanimate things; Egg - Because all others are inedible; Silver - As it is the only metallic object; I was unable to quickly come out with a rationale for Desk and Toothbrush, but I thought there must be some rationale for selecting them that I am unable to think of...

    • @ChessThingsOfficial
      @ChessThingsOfficial Před 5 měsíci

      Exactly my thoughts.

    • @FlyingFox86
      @FlyingFox86 Před 5 měsíci +40

      @@pradeepsekar I wouldn't say the others are all inedible. You can get some meat from a friend.
      And you can interpret that however you like.

  • @DrThot
    @DrThot Před 5 měsíci +641

    As a guy with a degree in chemistry I always look at silver as a noun first. I went with toothbrush because it’s the only word that doesn’t have an “e” in it

    • @japanpanda2179
      @japanpanda2179 Před 5 měsíci +24

      I'm a college chemistry student and I chose silver. Even if you consider silver a noun, it's an uncountable noun, while the other four are countable. You can have "a" or "an" before the others, a toothbrush, an egg, a friend, but you can't have "a silver".

    • @BoxStudioExecutive
      @BoxStudioExecutive Před 5 měsíci +10

      @@japanpanda2179 sure you can, you just have to switch languages. Some languages do not have a concept of countable v. uncountable noun.

    • @jeffreytempleton3213
      @jeffreytempleton3213 Před 5 měsíci +2

      I am a chemist, and I had the same reasoning.

    • @penteractgaming
      @penteractgaming Před 5 měsíci +11

      ​@@japanpanda2179uncountable how? 3 grams Silver, 6 moles Silver, 5×10^19 atoms of Silver, 3 cm^3 Silver etc.

    • @Rostam.
      @Rostam. Před 5 měsíci +19

      That would be measuring, not counting. With "uncountable" it is meant that you can't say "one silver", "five silver" etc.

  • @MrJoe3180
    @MrJoe3180 Před 5 měsíci +60

    I immediately said toothbrush because it is a compound word. Interesting logic for the others. Guess I am right to always ask what my son is learning in class before I can try to answer some questions when helping with his homework. It usually gives me a clue to what the teacher is looking for as an answer.

    • @bruhseelas
      @bruhseelas Před 4 měsíci +1

      i said toothbrush coz is the only one without an e in it

    • @cantstopcooking929
      @cantstopcooking929 Před 4 měsíci +1

      I immediately guessed toothbrush also, because it was the only compound word.

    • @barneyhall2753
      @barneyhall2753 Před 7 dny

      Yep, understanding the context for the question is critical.

  • @Leopoldshark
    @Leopoldshark Před 5 měsíci +37

    In the community post, I was tempted to joke "I picked friend because it's the only one I don't have". I picked egg because it's the only one that starts with a vowel. It also seems to be something that sticks out to a 1st grader more than an adult that is more knowledgeable about these things and have a lot more to consider.

  • @cha0sunity
    @cha0sunity Před 5 měsíci +126

    It never occurred to me to think of silver as an adjective. I naturally thought of silver is a material.

    • @japanpanda2179
      @japanpanda2179 Před 5 měsíci +10

      Even if you consider silver a noun, it's an uncountable noun, while the other four are countable. You can have "a" or "an" before the others, a toothbrush, an egg, a friend, but you can't have "a silver".

    • @merkazoidduff7651
      @merkazoidduff7651 Před 5 měsíci +10

      @@japanpanda2179Judas betrayed Jesus for 30 pieces of silver. I’d say you can count silver.

    • @japanpanda2179
      @japanpanda2179 Před 5 měsíci +9

      @@merkazoidduff7651 You said "pieces of silver" though, not "silvers"

    • @haydenrobloxgamer3501
      @haydenrobloxgamer3501 Před 5 měsíci +8

      @@japanpanda2179 A team can win two silvers (silver medal) at a tournament. Another example is that a purse can have six silvers (silver coin) in it.

    • @BoxStudioExecutive
      @BoxStudioExecutive Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@japanpanda2179 In English, yes. Countability of nouns is not a concept universal to all languages.

  • @ravikrao
    @ravikrao Před 5 měsíci +505

    My daughter's teacher posed these types of questions at the start of the day. There are typically multiple answers, and it's more about justifying the reasoning. The kids can be as creative as they want as long as they can explain their reasoning.

    • @MoxxoM
      @MoxxoM Před 5 měsíci +24

      I would wish that all teachers would have that attitude, but there is a large number of them that won't count any answer unless it's the one they thought of as right (if reddit posts with pictures attached surrounding this topic are any indication of cause).

    • @redrackham6812
      @redrackham6812 Před 5 měsíci +7

      That is good if you are teaching rhetoric, that is, how to argue and how to reason. If you are teaching the difference between adjectives and nouns, then silver really is the best answer, even though silver certainly can be a noun.

    • @nychold
      @nychold Před 5 měsíci +10

      And if that was the point behind the question, I'd be absolutely on board with it. Give a question where the only wrong answer is to not know why you picked an answer. Unfortunately, that doesn't seem to be the case in this instance, so I still say this is an unfair question because every answer could be correct.

    • @BytebroUK
      @BytebroUK Před 5 měsíci +1

      I was just about to post up-thread - you're totally right in my head. My initial thing was, "wait, any of those could be 'right'". Then I saw that the question was offered to young kids and I got it... "There is no 'right' answer, but how do you *think*?!"

    • @KroganCharr
      @KroganCharr Před 5 měsíci +5

      This is actually the case all the way up to senior student classes, perhaps even more so then. For example, when you write an essay, something typically done by older students, your conclusions do not (or at least should not) affect the score at all - only your reasoning does. By contrast, younger students often answer simple memorization questions, "cross the correct statement", or simple calculations like "4 x 7". In those cases you either get it right or you don't.
      Even in a relatively rigid subject like math, this is true. In the final years of my math class, I could get almost full score in a question where I get the answer entirely wrong - if that wrong answer was the result of a minor mistake and my overall approach was the correct one. Really, the bigger issue was that if you made a mistake, chances are the question is getting more difficult because the teacher had prepared the numbers to work out nicely, and because of your mistake it gets more complicated.

  • @jamesconrad940
    @jamesconrad940 Před 5 měsíci +11

    This is exactly why as a professor for many years (now retired) I NEVER gave True/False or multiple-choice questions on exams, unless I also added that full credit depended on giving a valid argument for your choice. Everyone's brain is wired differently and unless you allow the student's argument to be presented you cannot correctly evaluate the answer.

  • @ashlynnday9890
    @ashlynnday9890 Před 5 měsíci +9

    It would have been more obvious if the teacher hadn’t picked an adjective that was also a noun. That’s where people got thrown off I believe.
    Also, I was explaining the theory of countable items to my dad, who’s a painter, and he brought up that you can have countable silvers, if you’re counting different shades of silver. Thought that was an interesting point!

  • @videosaleatoriosdemeustrab1029
    @videosaleatoriosdemeustrab1029 Před 5 měsíci +306

    As soon as I saw the problem, I thought it was toothbrush because it is a compound word. It's crazy how all the other words have a reason to be the odd one. That's why I love logic puzzles.

    • @snakeorbreak6258
      @snakeorbreak6258 Před 5 měsíci +21

      I thought it was toothbrush because all the others have an E in them

    • @imachickengirl
      @imachickengirl Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@snakeorbreak6258sameee

    • @one_logic
      @one_logic Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@snakeorbreak6258same

    • @gamerpro608
      @gamerpro608 Před 5 měsíci

      i thought toothbrush cause it has a lot of letters

    • @SmiterG
      @SmiterG Před 5 měsíci +1

      me too

  • @smilerbob
    @smilerbob Před 5 měsíci +139

    But Silver (chemical element Ag) *is* a noun, it is a thing, it is not descriptive.
    Without context the whole question is open to interpretation
    It could be friend as that can describe a person
    It could be toothbrush as that is the only word with a total letter count with two digits
    It could be egg as that is the only one with an odd number of letters

    • @w999d
      @w999d Před 5 měsíci +7

      silver can be adjective

    • @smilerbob
      @smilerbob Před 5 měsíci +23

      @@w999dIt can also be a verb, as can friend, which is the point I am making…there was no context to the question.
      It is like having a question “What road does Bill need to take to get to London?
      A - M4
      B - M3
      C - A30”
      All three are correct, but without knowing what license Bill has or where he currently is we cannot answer the question and the same is true for this one.
      The post put up yesterday proved that. We was missing one vital piece of information that only came to light in this video…”the children had been learning about nouns”. With that piece of information it becomes a choice of two being the odd one out. We then discover they are first grade so chances are they are learning colours not chemical elements so we can, with almost certainty, rule Silver out from being the noun.
      These questions all come down to context, and without the context they are almost impossible to answer with any degree of certainty

    • @jacobgoldman5780
      @jacobgoldman5780 Před 5 měsíci

      It can be both often used as a color which would be descriptive.

    • @leonais1
      @leonais1 Před 5 měsíci +8

      Silverware can commonly be talked about as silver, in which case it becomes as a noun. 'I will clean the silver today'.

    • @ScrayaZ
      @ScrayaZ Před 5 měsíci +7

      for me i choose silver because its the only thing thats not "one", you can have one friend, one desk, but not one silver, you only have a silver car, or silver ingot, silver bar, or 1 kg of silver, but not just 1 silver

  • @pepajimenez8376
    @pepajimenez8376 Před měsícem +2

    On silver one that I like better is that all the rest are countable nouns (you have one friend, one desk, one toothbrush, one egg…). You cannot have “one silver” as it is an uncountable noun (you can have a lot of/little silver). Besides I remember learning about this concept in school and it would make sense in the context of homework.

    • @N3onDr1v3
      @N3onDr1v3 Před 26 dny

      I mean teeeeechnically, you could count every atom of silver...
      Therefore silver is the only plural answer 🤔

    • @joejohnson1213
      @joejohnson1213 Před 16 dny

      Bread and water are also uncountable nouns by this definition...

  • @JoyfulJennalain
    @JoyfulJennalain Před 5 měsíci +4

    I always find it rewarding when I participate in a CZcams poll and then the CZcamsr makes a video about the poll & results. This was a fun one to be a part of. Thanks so much for involving us!

  • @FungiGamer
    @FungiGamer Před 5 měsíci +96

    “Hey man check out this chunk of silver I mined”
    “You can’t mine silver, it’s an adjective”

    • @Arkylie
      @Arkylie Před 5 měsíci +11

      Yes, and very *abstract* -- just like gold, platinum, copper, iron, aluminum...

    • @katherinewells3099
      @katherinewells3099 Před 5 měsíci +7

      Just what I was thinking. Both an adjective and a noun.

    • @Shatbat
      @Shatbat Před 5 měsíci +3

      Look at how you wrote "this chunk of silver" and not "this silver"

    • @giovannigarciadesouzapasto2249
      @giovannigarciadesouzapasto2249 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Well, it still stands out, as it is both an adjective and a noun

    • @ssgoko88
      @ssgoko88 Před 5 měsíci +2

      ​@@Shatbatreferring to jewelry you could say "her silver" or "that silver there"

  • @laszlokatko883
    @laszlokatko883 Před 5 měsíci +188

    I personally would choose "egg" but because it starts with a vowel and all the others with a consonant, and for a first grade pupil this would be also logical. I enjoyed every second of this video very much! Thank you!

    • @nickfielding5685
      @nickfielding5685 Před 5 měsíci +8

      egg is the only one you can eat

    • @ramudon2428
      @ramudon2428 Před 5 měsíci +8

      ​​@@nickfielding5685No it isn't? You can eat all of those things.

    • @woland_
      @woland_ Před 5 měsíci +9

      @@ramudon2428 Only if you have pica and are also cannibalistic, which would be a rather uncommon combination of mental disorders to suffer from.

    • @ramudon2428
      @ramudon2428 Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@woland_ I didn't way one would like to eat these things, but you definitely could :p

    • @ericblase4873
      @ericblase4873 Před 5 měsíci +2

      That’s why voted for Egg in the poll. Jumped out as an obvious clear difference.

  • @lawragatajar
    @lawragatajar Před 5 měsíci +10

    Egg or Toothbrush stuck out to me for the same reasons you gave. Given this is generally a math channel, I leaned towards egg for have an odd number of characters, but it was interesting to see desk had a mathematical reason for being out as well.

  • @Insanyeity
    @Insanyeity Před 5 měsíci +5

    every time I have seen an "odd one out" thing, theres always been perfectly good reasons for each of them. It's not meant for you to figure out which one is odd, it's for you to stretch your brain and create a reasoning for one.

  • @atriyakoller136
    @atriyakoller136 Před 5 měsíci +130

    I chose "egg" because it's the only one that starts with a vowel. An ESL teacher here, yeah. But if I get an "odd one out" task that I give my students, I always accept any answers that are not in the answer key as long as the student justifies their answer well 😊

    • @nailbender6079
      @nailbender6079 Před 5 měsíci +5

      egg - can't eat a friend, desk, toothbrush, or a piece of / or color silver
      question is poised to 6 yr olds
      all these fancy math, and linguistic solutions are uncomprehendible to the average 6 yr old

    • @mrosskne
      @mrosskne Před 5 měsíci

      What does it mean to be the odd one out?

    • @schfooge
      @schfooge Před 5 měsíci +2

      Well, you could eat a friend if you're a cannibal.

    • @schfooge
      @schfooge Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@mrosskne - It means that there's something that differentiates that option from all the other options. Sesame Street used to regularly teach this concept with their different versions of the "One of these things doesn't belong here" song.

    • @mrosskne
      @mrosskne Před 5 měsíci

      @@schfooge what attributes are used to determine belonging?

  • @jimrodarmel8512
    @jimrodarmel8512 Před 5 měsíci +227

    I chose toothbrush because of no "e". I also was thinking about this being aimed at 1st-graders, so I thought arguments about abstract concepts and analysis from number theory was unlikely to be the answer the asker had in mind, but if a young child could articulate such an answer, I certainly wouldn't tell them they were "wrong"! I also noticed that good reasons could be given for each choice. I noticed that this kind of outcome should remind us that when we pose this kind of question, we need to listen carefully to the answers, they may come up with valid reasoning that we didn't anticipate. There often is no one right answer, even if we think there is! This kind of question would be more useful as a class discussion exercise rather than a solitary test question with the implication that there is one right answer.

    • @windowbar
      @windowbar Před 5 měsíci +5

      i chose toothbrush, but because it was the only compound word

    • @purevessle2641
      @purevessle2641 Před 5 měsíci +3

      You, uhhh, you misspelled kind there, this specific misspelling might be kinda important to fix...

    • @broek6075
      @broek6075 Před 5 měsíci +1

      It's friend because the others are all things and friend is a person

    • @jimrodarmel8512
      @jimrodarmel8512 Před 5 měsíci

      @@purevessle2641 Thanks, fixed it. I usually catch my typos, but I missed one this time!

    • @mrosskne
      @mrosskne Před 5 měsíci

      friend is the only word with the letter N so it's the odd one out
      toothbrush is the only word with the letter O so it's the odd one out
      egg is the only word with the letter G so it's the odd one out
      desk is the only word with the letter K so it's the odd one out
      silver is the only word with the letter L so it's the odd one out

  • @ReimerGodt
    @ReimerGodt Před 5 měsíci +1

    For a first-grader,
    everyday items are friend, egg, desk, thoothbrush nowerdays.
    1) Silver would be by itself not an everyday item.
    If silver would be replaced with money,
    then I would not choose it.
    2) Friend would be the only thing "living",
    or, to talk to, or receive reactions.
    All other items would be passive by itself.
    3) Egg could emerge as something new,
    transformation to chicken.
    All other items would be perceived static / fixed.
    4) Toothbrush as only handy tool,
    in this case to clean something.
    5) Silver for can't be destroyed by fire.

  • @germyz
    @germyz Před 5 měsíci +3

    1. The answer is friend
    2. The rest are concrete nouns and a friend is technically not concrete
    3. Silver, I imaged, was not the color but the physical silver

  • @AzureKyle
    @AzureKyle Před 5 měsíci +117

    The one that jumped out at me was friend, because I view a friend as a person, while all the other things were objects. I honestly, didn't even think of silver as the color, but as an actual object, like a chunk of silver.

    • @jacksonsay37
      @jacksonsay37 Před 5 měsíci +6

      Although "toothbrush" was the odd one for me, I thought of silver the same way you did.

    • @allanflippin2453
      @allanflippin2453 Před 5 měsíci +8

      Same reasoning that I had. It's more straightforward than saying a "Friend" is conditional and the others are constant.

    • @therobertguy2436
      @therobertguy2436 Před 5 měsíci +9

      Everything is an inanimate object except for friend

    • @sombrenouille9492
      @sombrenouille9492 Před 5 měsíci +1

      ⁠@@therobertguy2436I would think that an egg is also alive ?

    • @therobertguy2436
      @therobertguy2436 Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@sombrenouille9492 well whenever we get eggs from the supermarket, they are not alive. If it is farm fresh, then yes, but most people deal with eggs that are not alive.

  • @GuardianOwl
    @GuardianOwl Před 5 měsíci +289

    I immediately gravitated to "Friend" as the odd one out because all other items were inanimate objects. But as long as there is the second step of explaining your reasoning, and other answers are accepted if the reasoning is sound, I think this is a great kind of question.
    Egg could also be an option for it being the only edible object.

    • @Eaten_squid_cake
      @Eaten_squid_cake Před 5 měsíci +60

      I mean you can eat a friend but they won’t be very happy about it

    • @TestTubeBaba
      @TestTubeBaba Před 5 měsíci +3

      ​@@Eaten_squid_cake LMAO xD

    • @DawnDavidson
      @DawnDavidson Před 5 měsíci +16

      @@Eaten_squid_cakeThat depends entirely on your definition of “eat.”
      This insight brought to you by my teenage self (decades ago) who thought that a t-shirt in the mall was hilarious, and didn’t understand why my mom wouldn’t buy it for me: “Save a tree: Eat a beaver”. 😂 Though at the time my misapprehension was because I didn’t understand the slang meaning of “beaver” as much as the slang meaning of “eat.” 🤣

    • @GuardianOwl
      @GuardianOwl Před 5 měsíci +8

      @@Eaten_squid_cake Ya, I was going to condition that with "morally" edible object, but figured a first grader would know you aren't supposed to eat people.

    • @jacobpadilla9256
      @jacobpadilla9256 Před 5 měsíci +6

      Is it not way simpler to just, say friend because a friend is a living thing, nothing else is a living thing? (I'm not considering egg alive here, most people wouldn't I feel)

  • @hill7469
    @hill7469 Před 5 měsíci +2

    For me, Google Bard said:
    This is a classic question with no single definitive answer, as different people might use different criteria to identify the odd one out. Here are some potential arguments for each word:
    * **Friend:** This is the only living or abstract concept on the list, whereas the others are physical objects.
    * **Desk:** This is the only piece of furniture, while the others are smaller personal items.
    * **Egg:** This is the only natural object and the only food item on the list.
    * **Toothbrush:** This is the only word with two syllables, while the others have one syllable.
    * **Silver:** This is the only word that can function as both a noun (a precious metal) and an adjective (a color).
    Ultimately, the "odd one out" depends on the perspective you take and the reasoning you prioritize. You can choose the answer that makes the most sense to you!
    It's also worth noting that this question is often used as a test of critical thinking and logic skills, so there's no need to find the "right" answer. The important thing is to be able to identify and articulate your reasoning for your choice.
    I hope this helps!

  • @Mbartel500
    @Mbartel500 Před měsícem +2

    Toothbrush is the only one that is a combination of two words. Silver is a chemical element, so in fact it is a noun and an adjective. But since this was a first grade question, I would choose toothbrush, since it is made from two words.

  • @draheim90
    @draheim90 Před 5 měsíci +107

    I initially thought of silver as a noun given it’s one of the elements.
    My answer was friend because the other four are objects in and of themselves (again thinking of silver as the element) whereas friend is a relational concept. In other words, no one is inherently a “friend” but rather is a friend of someone else.
    But yeah, these questions are ambiguous and so really one’s rationale behind their answer is more important than the answer itself.

    • @nickronca1562
      @nickronca1562 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I initially thought of silver as an adjective but then realized it could also be a noun, but then realized that friend that I thought of a noun at first could also be an adjective so I was debating in my head between silver for being the only adjective in a list of nouns, and friend being the only adjective in a list of nouns.

    • @buhzs9663
      @buhzs9663 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Same

    • @koharumi1
      @koharumi1 Před 5 měsíci +1

      A friend can also be an object.

    • @ultrasoulviver
      @ultrasoulviver Před 5 měsíci +1

      It’s kind of a trick question since it’s both an adjective and a noun, because “I have a silver bar” uses it as an adjective “I have a bar of silver” uses it as a noun.

    • @SpectraStarShooter
      @SpectraStarShooter Před 5 měsíci +2

      You can hold your friend’s hand, but you can’t hold friend in your hand.

  • @fenzelian
    @fenzelian Před 5 měsíci +279

    One really useful tip for stuff like this in school is to never forget what you were just studying before you got the test and what the other questions on the test are about. This is often very important. Tests exist in context.

    • @thesoundsmith
      @thesoundsmith Před 5 měsíci +13

      I used to be VERY good at taking tests because I saw this - and often the answer, or a hint, was in other questions on the test. So i was a genius - on paper...🙄🙃

    • @jondoty
      @jondoty Před 5 měsíci +7

      It used to drive me nuts when teachers asked imprecise questions. Kids usually knew what the teacher meant to ask, but there were other correct answers depending on how you interpreted it.

    • @programaths
      @programaths Před 5 měsíci

      @@thesoundsmithIt takes something to see meta patterns. (I see a pattern in the test and that pattern repeats in other test -- The pattern is a pattern)

    • @Mongalingalong
      @Mongalingalong Před 5 měsíci

      LOL that's so cute why do y'all get tests right after learning smth LOL that's so easy 😂

    • @programaths
      @programaths Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@Mongalingalong You have different kinds of testing. An individual point of matter, then an integration test.
      So, if you learn fractions, you get a test on how to compare them using some properties, then another one on how to use ratios, then another one on how to add fractions with different denominators, etc.
      Then, you get a test where everything is mixed, and you've to be able to find out which tool will give you the faster answer.
      That allows students to see their progress but also helps the teacher to see if it was correctly taught or if he needs to do some review. So, one test may include previous points because the student did poorly. It can also be because it's a build-up, and the teacher needs to know if you failed due to not knowing the prerequisites.
      Testing, done correctly, is really hard.

  • @beepbop6697
    @beepbop6697 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Silver is a noun too -- just as every other element in the periodic table is. With the backstory that this was after a lesson on nouns & adjectives, silver makes sense. They should've used a different adjective (color) that isn't also a noun.
    I answered "friend" in the poll.

  • @OrenLikes
    @OrenLikes Před 5 měsíci +2

    guessing before watching:
    toothbrush - combination of two words
    toothbrush - doesn't contain the letter "e"
    toothbrush - double digit letter count
    about toothbrush - should be called teethbrush...
    silver - not made(/born/hatched)
    silver - (single) element
    silver - cannot ask "how many"
    silver - does not have plural form (silvers)
    egg - starts with a vowel
    egg - double non-vowel letter
    egg - prime letter count
    friend - only one with autonomous actions
    friend - something you can be
    friend - subjective
    desk - cannot be singled out, so, therefore, it is singled out! :)
    desk - actually... letter count is not a sum of consecutive integers...
    --
    orange - the only color
    --
    1 - one divisor
    (these are numbers, not words)
    6 - doesn't contain the letter "e"

  • @orthochronicity6428
    @orthochronicity6428 Před 5 měsíci +300

    Given this is primarily a math logic channel, the question definitely primed me to look for numerical patterns (I chose "egg"). Consequently, I'm a bit surprised both "egg" and "desk" were not more chosen by the channel's audience.

    • @stevenz933
      @stevenz933 Před 5 měsíci +27

      I chose egg too. It is the only choice that begins with a "vowel" 😉

    • @norlin76
      @norlin76 Před 5 měsíci +18

      @@stevenz933 (about to watch) I said egg, only word with an "odd" number of letters. But was also thinking silver, as it is an adjective and the others are nouns. Of course, silver can also be a noun, but was thinking that the teacher might have slipped up and been thinking of it only as an adjective.

    • @IanHsieh
      @IanHsieh Před 5 měsíci +12

      I choose Egg too because it's the only one with odd number of letters.

    • @extremelynoobgaming4742
      @extremelynoobgaming4742 Před 5 měsíci +6

      I choosed egg because it was the only edible one unless you consider cannibalism 💀

    • @fenzelian
      @fenzelian Před 5 měsíci +2

      I also chose egg because it's the only one with an odd number of letters.

  • @roguebanshee
    @roguebanshee Před 5 měsíci +82

    Tests that ask the student to show their reasoning and/or work are IMO far superior to those that rely on just picking the correct option. By making the student show their way of thinking, you can guide their understanding of the problem and help them build critical reasoning skills.

    • @rchild2151
      @rchild2151 Před 5 měsíci +6

      Yes, yes and yes! I'd give you more than one thumbs-up if I could. The lesson is not about the words or their meanings; it is about learning that questions can have more than one answer; and how to use facts to clearly explain to others how you made your choice. Never too early to start learning the elements of critical thinking and logical argument. Sadly, these skills are in very short supply these days.

    • @mistere5857
      @mistere5857 Před 5 měsíci +5

      The problem with this is you are heavily dependent on the teacher or the person grading to have enough critical thinking skills themselves to properly assess the students work. Not sure about your experience, but I have found very few teachers who possess those skills

    • @legionaireb
      @legionaireb Před 5 měsíci +3

      While all that is absolutely true, it's also irrelevant because this wasn't that kind of test. This was specifically a grammar test about nouns and there was an intended correct answer. This question was poorly formulated for it's intent.

    • @scottmcshannon6821
      @scottmcshannon6821 Před 5 měsíci +1

      of couse the problem is that type of question takes as least 10 times more for the teacher to grade.

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael Před 5 měsíci +2

      The problem with that is "what do we do with the information?" If we had given the test on another day, would the result be the same. (Among adults that is not likely.)

  • @jaysathwik
    @jaysathwik Před 5 měsíci +2

    Another out-of-box solution: All the first four options are something that a first grader would come accross everyday but not silver, unless they are from a fancy family. Hence, "silver" lmao.

  • @emmettracine8310
    @emmettracine8310 Před 5 měsíci +3

    My first gut instinct was "toothbrush" as it's the only word without a E in it. Question basically depends entirely on the context of the test and lesson.

  • @olorinistar9903
    @olorinistar9903 Před 5 měsíci +259

    I love how we're all overanalysing this first grade question. These questions are always subjective, so as the parent my first response would be to ask what the kid learned about in class that week.
    But I initially thought friend because people usually define a noun as a person, place or thing, and friend is a person while all the others are things.

    • @msshortty2u112
      @msshortty2u112 Před 5 měsíci +26

      Feel like people are uselessly complicating it, to me at least, all of them are inanimate objects, except for friend, so I would say that would be the odd one out.

    • @olorinistar9903
      @olorinistar9903 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@awesomeishu I taught my kid nouns in first grade, so 🤷‍♂️

    • @TX2015
      @TX2015 Před 5 měsíci +3

      I assumed it was "egg", because it was the only one with an "odd" number of letters. Haven't finished watching the video, no idea if I'm correct(?

    • @msshortty2u112
      @msshortty2u112 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@TX2015I mean, I'm assuming this is just a question to test how you think, so there is no real wrong answer.

    • @sylv256
      @sylv256 Před 5 měsíci

      silver because these are everyday objects normal people have or interact with, but silver is a rare metal.

  • @lucienskinner-savallisch5399
    @lucienskinner-savallisch5399 Před 5 měsíci +158

    I was on team friend because of the object vs concept rationale as well. It's interesting how most people thought that as well. I definitely agree the reasoning is more important than the answer, and I wish more were taught as such.

    • @johnberwyn23
      @johnberwyn23 Před 5 měsíci

      Same

    • @yvonnetomenga5726
      @yvonnetomenga5726 Před 5 měsíci +12

      I focused on friend because a friend is alive and the other words do not refer to anything alive.

    • @lucienskinner-savallisch5399
      @lucienskinner-savallisch5399 Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@yvonnetomenga5726 that's a solid reason 🔥

    • @ctalon
      @ctalon Před 5 měsíci

      technically, a “desk” is also a concept

    • @LibertyMonk
      @LibertyMonk Před 5 měsíci +2

      ​@@ctaloni mean, technically, all words are concepts, but thats not helpful in determining the odd one out.

  • @PedanticTwit
    @PedanticTwit Před 5 měsíci +2

    Absent the class context, "egg" seems to fit the question best.

  • @WilliamLious
    @WilliamLious Před 11 dny +2

    Egg? All the words have an even number of letters except egg.

  • @pokejinwwi
    @pokejinwwi Před 5 měsíci +113

    In my opinion "friend" is the odd one out because all the others don't move by themselves, but any of them can be considered the odd one out since there's a way to justify for each of them. It's like having a sequence that goes 2-4-8-16 and asking what goes next, you can put in any number and make a pattern for it.

    • @scientist784
      @scientist784 Před 5 měsíci +14

      I have thought "friend" too. But I choose it, because it is not an item, thing. Like it is a living being.

    • @reklawaynana4261
      @reklawaynana4261 Před 5 měsíci +4

      We should be 'friends'😅

    • @Nulify-jc4fs
      @Nulify-jc4fs Před 5 měsíci +6

      I originally thought this too. But after thinking about it more, "Friend" does not have to be a living thing, like the video said, its a concept, a feeling you might have, and while its usually a living being/human, it doesn't have to be.

    • @mrosskne
      @mrosskne Před 5 měsíci +7

      friend is the only word with the letter N so it's the odd one out
      toothbrush is the only word with the letter O so it's the odd one out
      egg is the only word with the letter G so it's the odd one out
      desk is the only word with the letter K so it's the odd one out
      silver is the only word with the letter L so it's the odd one out

    • @user-ti3ss5cy2u
      @user-ti3ss5cy2u Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@mrosskne personally, I believe, when you picking an odd object of a set, you must find a feature wich is common for all the object but one. And it is important that this feature was positive, not negative. In othe words it should show something the objectd HAVE in common, not the something they all DO NOT HAVE.
      Otherwise all these problems turn out to be trivial and ridiculous: you can justify every objects just because "other objects are not this objects, while this object itself surely is", and then it makes absolutely no sense.

  • @renerpho
    @renerpho Před 5 měsíci +32

    I had ChatGPT answer that question 50 times. It chose "friend" 32 times, "toothbrush" 15 times, and "silver" 3 times. The reasoning for each answer remained consistent throughout. The other two options ("desk" and "egg") were not chosen.
    The odd one out is "Friend." The reason is that all the other words (Desk, Toothbrush, Egg, and Silver) are physical objects or tangible items, whereas "Friend" is a conceptual term referring to a relationship between people. The other items are things you can touch or interact with in a tangible way, while a friend is an abstract concept representing a social connection.
    The odd one out in this list is "Toothbrush." The reason is that all the other items (Friend, Desk, Egg, Silver) are typically associated with inanimate objects or concepts, while a toothbrush is associated with personal hygiene and is used for a specific purpose related to the human body. The other items are more general and don't have a direct connection to personal care or hygiene.
    The word "Silver" is the odd one out. The reason for this is that all the other words (Friend, Desk, Toothbrush, and Egg) are commonly associated with everyday items or concepts, whereas "Silver" is a material. The first four words refer to objects or people, while "Silver" refers to a type of metal.
    ***
    It got interesting when I amended the question, telling ChatGPT that this was asked to first graders following a lesson about nouns. With that additional information, ChatGPT answered "friend" 50 out of 50 times. The reasoning remains basically the same:
    I would say that "Friend" is the odd one out because it is a person, and the other words are things or objects.

    • @user-kp1js6cb2s
      @user-kp1js6cb2s Před 5 měsíci

      Сразу анек про мужика считающего спички на фабрике вспомнился

    • @l.w.paradis2108
      @l.w.paradis2108 Před 4 měsíci

      ChatGPT did not come up with countable versus uncountable nouns, discrete versus partitive? Lol, fail!

  • @inspray5307
    @inspray5307 Před 5 měsíci +3

    I think one's native language may influence the answer they give. There are couple of these kind of videos where I see the question in english but think about it in my native language so I am biasing rules and concepts after my language. It often results in totally different answer than is "expected". Simplest example might be if a noun is countable or not.

  • @JerryJen-cr9xo
    @JerryJen-cr9xo Před 4 měsíci +1

    My answer would be silver, the reason is that other things are like kind of going in a cycle, for going to school, like first you wake up and brush your teeth, and most commonly used thing for keeping our teeth white is a "toothbrush", then before going to school, you would have breakfast, and the most common breakfast is probably eating an "egg", then you go to school, where you obviously meet with a "friend" or friends, then when like the first period is, you sit on your seat and a "desk" is definitely an essential thing you would use there or i can say that it would definitely be there, right? It's like in every classroom of a school, but "metal" is the only thing that's not coming in the cycle, maybe the teacher is teaching about a periodic table, or something other similar to metal, but necessarily it wouldn't happen, cuz it is not gonna be happening while others are most common things in this cycle, yeah guys that's what I thought made sense for metal to be the odd one out😅

  • @srbojangals
    @srbojangals Před 5 měsíci +28

    My thought was on which "word" is the odd one out. Not what the word represents, but as a word. So, based on the words themselves, toothbrush had the most unique letters, was a compound word, was the longest. Seemed to be the most unique.

    • @joostvanrens
      @joostvanrens Před 5 měsíci +3

      I think with questions like these, you shouldn't think about which has more X or most Y. That would almost never be the intended answer. But what does one word had that the others do not.

    • @andrewcook4873
      @andrewcook4873 Před 5 měsíci

      Yeah, I would discount anything that relies on one thing being on the end of some sort of spectrum like longest, shortest etc. Equally, the only one without an e is an ok answer but there’s only one with a v so what’s to choose between them, e is kind of an arbitrary choice, why not the other letters, rather than being an important characteristic ? Typically you don’t look for the odd one out you look for the connection between the others. The biggest, while being an outlier, is still connected to the others by having a size and so being on a scale with the others.
      Being a compound word seems like a perfectly sensible reason though.

    • @aogasd
      @aogasd Před 5 měsíci +1

      Ye I also picked toothbrush for being a compound word. I think I might be primed towards that answer tho, since my native language has a huge amount of compound words.

    • @yurenchu
      @yurenchu Před 5 měsíci +1

      That reasoning passed my mind too: since it specifically said "which *word* is the odd one out", we should just look at the properties of the words themselves, and not to the things/concepts that these words represent. So even though "friend" refers to a living being, a human being, a person, or a relation rather than a physical inanimate object, it cannot be the answer to the question based on those arguments alone.
      So my choice too was "toothbrush", because you can cut it into two parts that are also English words ("tooth" and "brush"). ("Friend" can also be cut into two parts, "fri" and "end" , but as far as I'm aware, "fri" is not an English word.)

  • @michaellockett4044
    @michaellockett4044 Před 5 měsíci +24

    My first thought is "egg". All the other answers have an even number of letters. And with that hypothesis I looked for extra clues in the question and the word "odd" stands out which reinforces my thought process.

    • @michaelsteve5922
      @michaelsteve5922 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Also, egg begins with a vowel; all others begin with a consonant. Isn't that odd?

    • @seppokaitainen
      @seppokaitainen Před 5 měsíci

      Yup, hard to argue against the most literal answer.

    • @simongchadwick
      @simongchadwick Před 5 měsíci +1

      Also "egg" is the only word with a descending character (a font symbol that descends below the script baseline, like j, p, q, and y).

    • @declup
      @declup Před 5 měsíci

      I also thought a first-grader might consider the words rather than their meanings. "Egg" makes sense, but I went with "silver" since all the other words end in a pair of consonants.

  • @ffggddss
    @ffggddss Před 5 měsíci +3

    Thanks for this interesting video; I saw this brought up in a segment on a TV show a few days ago. 3 or 4 panelists/guests had answers, and were different.
    My thought was that most, if not all, the choices could be backed up as the "odd one out," but I would gravitate toward "friend," because it's the only animate object.
    Next, while all of them are nouns, silver is the only one that's not just a noun (chemical element #47; a precious metal), but is also an adjective (color or appearance or composition of the object being modified by it). [Admittedly, both "friend" and "egg" can be used as verbs, but those are kind of nonstandard usages. Come to think of it, "silver" can also be a verb. A telescope maker will silver a mirror for a reflecting telescope, e.g. That usage is actually a carry-over from the time when actual silver was coated onto glass; for many decades now, aluminum has been used, but the process is still called "silvering." Sometimes it's called "aluminizing."]
    I liked the other justifications you gave for some of the choices, which I hadn't thought of. Especially the part about square vs triangular numbers, because being a mathematician by schooling, I was kicking myself mentally for not having come up with that.
    Which also brings up the interesting point that there are some (∞ly many, in fact) numbers that are both square and triangular, which can be found using the solutions to Pell's Equation for n=8. The first, of course, is 1. The next ones are 36, 1225, ...
    Fred

  • @NinjaPheonix26
    @NinjaPheonix26 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I chose friend, because friend is the only thing that's not actually a item/object. I considered silver to be a noun, due to it being a element and as such, a physical object.

  • @fp9107
    @fp9107 Před 5 měsíci +36

    Toothbrush is the only word without an “e” in it

    • @slavakulishko3771
      @slavakulishko3771 Před 5 měsíci +5

      Or the only word that is a composite of two words.

    • @irmatroll
      @irmatroll Před 5 měsíci +1

      ​@slavakulishko3771 that was my thought. It's the only compound word.

  • @dpsj7
    @dpsj7 Před 5 měsíci +14

    According to me, it is egg as all other words have even number of letters whereas egg has odd number of letters

  • @dimitri1515
    @dimitri1515 Před 20 dny +1

    Silver is a noun. It is the right answer because all the other items are compromised of multiple types of atoms but silver has only silver atoms.

  • @Drivingmemacy8917
    @Drivingmemacy8917 Před 5 měsíci +1

    When I first looked at this I was trying to think like a first grader. Visually looking at it I noticed that toothbrush was there by itself looking so lonely. Friend and egg are even with each other. Desk and silver are even with each other. Toothbrush is right there by itself in the middle with no one to hang out with. Using the term “odd one out” is very deceptive and to me I was looking visually at the question. I still would say toothbrush because I wouldn’t have known what a noun or adjective was until the 2nd grade.

  • @Anuchan
    @Anuchan Před 5 měsíci +76

    I tried to approach it from the perspective of a first grader. I thought the most logical thing for a young child was to look at the words themselves without looking at the meaning, and I came up with egg being the only odd number. The other concepts felt a bit challenging for a first grader to me.

    • @theanitmeme
      @theanitmeme Před 5 měsíci +45

      I put friend because I have a toothbrush, a desk, an egg, and a silver ring.

    • @Phymacss
      @Phymacss Před 5 měsíci +13

      @@theanitmemethat’s dark😬

    • @mattgeek49
      @mattgeek49 Před 5 měsíci +8

      I also thought of egg but because it is the only word starting with a vowel, the others start with a consonant

    • @bosstowndynamics5488
      @bosstowndynamics5488 Před 5 měsíci +7

      Personally I would say friend, and I dunno, I would have thought most first graders could figure out that only one of the things is alive, albeit maybe with some help. And in the context of the recent class, a non-noun standing out would work as well, although the choice of silver specifically broke the question because it is in fact a noun in some contexts

    • @josephquinto5812
      @josephquinto5812 Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@mattgeek49
      It’s also the only thing you can eat

  • @RobertSmith-gu7qo
    @RobertSmith-gu7qo Před 5 měsíci +41

    I originally went with friend, as it is perceived more as a concept than as a noun. Silver is a base metal, like gold, so I never considered it as an adjective. I considered desk as the odd choice, since the other four can be held comfortably. Like many others have posted, this is more a test of ability to reason than a quest for the “right” answer.

  • @AJOlesen
    @AJOlesen Před 3 měsíci +1

    If you want to get technical, silver is the only one not being a noun is false. A noun is a person, place, or thing. And silver is both a color (which is what I am guessing the teacher meant by), but it's also a metal, which is a thing. So silver is a thing, which counts as a noun. So the teacher is wrong since she did not specify that she was talking about the color and not the metal.

  • @hugorodriguez8672
    @hugorodriguez8672 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Presh: going into semantics and technicalities to get the odd word
    Me: toothbrush is the odd one out because it's the only one without an e in it

  • @LFTRnow
    @LFTRnow Před 5 měsíci +4

    Silver is also a noun. We don't have silver in our coins anymore (unless you buy collectibles) but it is not just a color. It is element #47.

  • @theAkornTree
    @theAkornTree Před 5 měsíci +43

    I immediately knew there'd be reasons to choose any word, because there always is.
    But the choice that jumped out at me as the most obvious is 'friend', because all the others are mere objects whereas a friend is a person.
    The second one I thought of was silver, because all the others are singular nouns, which silver is not, regardless of whether you take it as a substance or a colour.
    The third one I thought of was toothbrush, because it is the only word that isn't aligned with the others 😁

    • @MrWhygodwhy
      @MrWhygodwhy Před 5 měsíci +1

      My first guess was "desk" cause it's the only one you don't put in your mouth.

  • @Aaxolotl.
    @Aaxolotl. Před 5 měsíci +1

    I said silver because it’s the only one that’s made of one type of material. Eggs have the shell, the whites, and the yolks. Toothbrush is made of plastic, bristles, and sometimes rubber/silicon grips. Desk is typically made of metal supports and some kind of hardened molded paste or plastic. Friend would be made of many things depending on what you may call “friend.” Silver is made of one thing always: silver

  • @EquaTechnologies
    @EquaTechnologies Před 5 měsíci

    Here are some alternatives:
    friend - Friends can be living creatures (just because cozmo is not actually living doesn't mean it's not my friend)
    egg - Can be eaten (legally and safely if properly cooked)
    silver - It's a metal
    desk - Regularly the biggest thing out of all the answers

  • @Hinotori_joj
    @Hinotori_joj Před 5 měsíci +56

    i went with friend because it was the only one that gave me a sense of animacy. I've been watching some videos recently about linguistics, and learned that some languages and conlangs categorize nouns based on animacy. I don't know whether most languages would only categorize friend as animate, i could also see egg very easily being considered animate on second thought.

    • @user-yy5xs6xj7r
      @user-yy5xs6xj7r Před 5 měsíci +7

      Yeah, in Russian "friend" is animate while all other words n this list aren't, so maybe that's why I was sure "friend" should be odd one out. But even in English, isn't "friend" (generally) "he" or "she", while all other words are "it"?

    • @SunroseStudios
      @SunroseStudios Před 5 měsíci

      cool to see another person with the same answer, and perhaps telling that we both have recently spent time with conlangs haha

    • @someonerandom9939
      @someonerandom9939 Před 5 měsíci

      Meanwhile I'm here thinking friend because I can put silver, an egg or a toothbrush on a desk but there's no way a friend belongs on top of a desk

    • @AnEnderNon
      @AnEnderNon Před 5 měsíci

      i mean i can certainly think of a couple scenario when they do@@someonerandom9939

    • @Miracle12348
      @Miracle12348 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I thought it was toothbrush because all the other words have a “e” in them.

  • @xlerb2286
    @xlerb2286 Před 5 měsíci +28

    I chose 'friend' in the poll and I'm sticking with it for the reasons stated in the video. Yes, silver can be an adjective, but I've worked with the metal and to me it's a noun more than an adjective :) I put myself though school thanks to silver, and it's ability to be easily cast and worked to make nice affordable jewelry.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Před 5 měsíci

      Too Silver something is to use mercury( quicksilver ) to coat glass to make a mirror - it is normally "silvering" but silver with work too

    • @keriezy
      @keriezy Před 5 měsíci

      I thought of silver as a noun but as something we can't make. Humans make eggs and the other things but we can't make silver.

    • @japanpanda2179
      @japanpanda2179 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@keriezyAlso silver is a naturally plural noun. You can have "a" or "an" before the others, a toothbrush, an egg, a friend, but you can't have "a silver".

    • @iamdigory
      @iamdigory Před 5 měsíci

      I thought of silver as a noun, but i picked it because it's a stuff not a thing

    • @japanpanda2179
      @japanpanda2179 Před 5 měsíci

      @@iamdigory "It's a stuff, and not a thing" is actually a very common sense way of describing the difference between an uncountable noun and a countable noun

  • @LifeAsANoun
    @LifeAsANoun Před 5 měsíci +1

    Very interesting. "Friend" is the one that stood out from the others because of its conceptual nature.

  • @kristymurphy9361
    @kristymurphy9361 Před 5 měsíci

    This reminded me of 2 stories my mom told me from my sister's and my kindergarten days. My sister's teacher was concerned about her picking the picture of a mug instead of a glass when asked to circle the 'cup'. The picture of the glass showed the liquid in it, and we were taught by mom that a 'glass' was see-through, hence why she picked the mug as a cup.
    The 2nd story is both my sister and I, when asked how do you cook a turkey, both answered the say way (different grades, different years). We said you first have to go out and kill it and pluck the feathers. 😂

  • @ashtoncartner
    @ashtoncartner Před 5 měsíci +34

    I actually thought it might be egg for a different reason. It was the only one that started with a vowel. It seemed simple enough for a first grader to figure out and I thought it would be more in line with what they would learn.
    Also the explanation for it being silver doesn't entirely hold since silver is also a noun, it being an element. But at the same time it's the only one that can be an adjective so that's probably a more accurate way of saying it.

    • @paulgoogol2652
      @paulgoogol2652 Před 5 měsíci

      Yea, egg ebviously. Only word with odd number of letters.

    • @velloceti6898
      @velloceti6898 Před 5 měsíci

      My first thought too

    • @shuwu2641
      @shuwu2641 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I thought egg is food, others are not.

    • @mrosskne
      @mrosskne Před 5 měsíci

      friend is the only word with the letter N so it's the odd one out
      toothbrush is the only word with the letter O so it's the odd one out
      egg is the only word with the letter G so it's the odd one out
      desk is the only word with the letter K so it's the odd one out
      silver is the only word with the letter L so it's the odd one out

    • @rayyt5566
      @rayyt5566 Před 5 měsíci

      This is my answer too! ^^

  • @earohrmoser
    @earohrmoser Před 5 měsíci +9

    This is a great lesson on why context matters… the original question followed a lesson on nouns, so the students would most likely look for nouns in the answer… We see the question in a math video and immediately start squaring words and triangulating letters like there’s no tomorrow… 😅

  • @donnymo179
    @donnymo179 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Friend is a living thing so it's the odd one out. Desk is a piece of furniture so it's the odd one out. Toothbrush is a tool so it's the odd one out. Egg is a food so it's the odd one out. Silver is an element so it's the odd one out.

  • @LiteraIIy_Nobody
    @LiteraIIy_Nobody Před měsícem +1

    I thought it was a toothbrush because toothbrush does not contain an "e".
    Also, silver can be used as a noun. (Example: He has 20 pieces of silver)

  • @deverinshaille7427
    @deverinshaille7427 Před 5 měsíci +94

    I believe that questions like this should be asked of children more often. The lesson of it -- like another comment said -- is to find your own answer and justify it. There's no point in copying someone else's work; there is no wrong answer as long as you can justify it; and thinking outside the box would be worth actual merit unlike many vaguely-designed questions that appear on tests today. Children need to be encouraged -- and learn how -- to think for themselves.

    • @rchild2151
      @rchild2151 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Yes! I'd give more thumbs-up if I could. Maybe you saw one of my comments which went something like: The lesson is not about the words or their meanings; it is about learning that questions can have more than one answer; and how to use facts to clearly explain to others how you made your choice. Never too early to start learning the elements of critical thinking and logical argument. Sadly, these skills are in very short supply these days.

    • @turnerjazz7872
      @turnerjazz7872 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Except that wasnt the answer and they'd be told they were wrong if they gave another answer besides silver.

    • @rchild2151
      @rchild2151 Před 5 měsíci

      @@turnerjazz7872 This question has no "right" or "wrong" answers. And if a teacher said any of the choices was wrong, that teacher needs to get out of the classroom. (See my comment just above.) It is the thinking process that is most important and this is not too much for 1st-graders to tackle. For how to do this, see --->
      "THINK LIKE A DETECTIVE" and "THINK LIKE A SCIENTIST," 2023, David Pakman.

    • @littlered6340
      @littlered6340 Před 5 měsíci +1

      ​@@turnerjazz7872yup, this is the problem with vague questions in general. I'm hopeful that this one made sense relative to the lesson, but unfortunately the question relies on I spoken external data, so any student who missed the class would get the answer wrong.
      I'd like to HOPE the teacher would be reasonable in that case and accept a well defended / reasoned answer but I'm sure we all know that doesn't really happen in practice 😂

    • @mrosskne
      @mrosskne Před 5 měsíci +3

      friend is the only word with the letter N so it's the odd one out
      toothbrush is the only word with the letter O so it's the odd one out
      egg is the only word with the letter G so it's the odd one out
      desk is the only word with the letter K so it's the odd one out
      silver is the only word with the letter L so it's the odd one out

  • @stevekerp1
    @stevekerp1 Před 5 měsíci +34

    Good question! "Friend" was my first choice because a friend is alive; the rest are inanimate. But the question centers on the "word" and not the things that each word represents. That being said, setting up the criteria for determining "odd-ness" leads to certain answers and eliminates other possibilities. Some bright first-graders there if they came up with some of the other answers and rationales.

    • @corcorandm
      @corcorandm Před 5 měsíci +1

      Egg could be alive

    • @bosstowndynamics5488
      @bosstowndynamics5488 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@corcorandmTrue, but rarely in most people's lives, and much more rarely than the word silver being used as a noun as well

    • @littleredpony6868
      @littleredpony6868 Před 5 měsíci

      @@bosstowndynamics5488silver being used as an adjective didn’t come to my mind until it was mentioned in the video. Then again I collect mercury dimes and those are 90% silver. I might be the exception but I personally tend to use the word silver as a noun much more frequently than I use it as an adjective

    • @BahKnee
      @BahKnee Před 5 měsíci

      That was my thought too. It was the only thing with a brain.

  • @mydkarthikmecharena9010
    @mydkarthikmecharena9010 Před měsícem +1

    I thought it was friend as it was the only living thing, I considered the egg as unfertilized egg

  • @aski551
    @aski551 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Another laymans version why desk is the odd one out. all of the other 4 could use desk.

  • @MichaelSmith-fj7di
    @MichaelSmith-fj7di Před 5 měsíci +7

    I thought of egg because it’s the only one that starts with a vowel.

  • @EclipticalSun
    @EclipticalSun Před 5 měsíci +11

    my original thought was silver (in this context as a noun). My thought was you encounter friends, desks, eggs, and toothbrushes in your day-to-day life, whereas silver is something „special“ and „expensive“ that you generally wouldn’t encounter every day

  • @SeanPat1001
    @SeanPat1001 Před 5 měsíci

    Each of the items in this question could be classified in such a way that it is the odd one out. I ask questions like this because the key part of the question is, “Explain why”. I’d be more interested in the students’ thought process and then the answer.
    Friend refers to a human being and implies a relationship.
    A desk is a piece of furniture.
    A toothbrush is a tool.
    An egg that you buy in a grocery store is food.
    Silver is the name of an element, which means it is a noun. Also people sometimes use it to describe flatware.
    Each of these five things can be classified in such a way that they are unique. The important function of this question is to see if the student can identify the uniqueness of any particular object and clearly state that uniqueness.
    Of course, if the teacher has just covered some topic in class, that would give the students some context. However, because silver is also a noun, that particular argument is not valid.

  • @zomaareenpersoon
    @zomaareenpersoon Před 3 měsíci

    I first picked egg, because it started with a vowel and then, looking at the other words because it was odd. Then looking a the question and the word odd I was convinced that was also the intended answer. When hearing desk was the least common choice I tried to come up with a good reason for desk and discovered it was the only word that shared all of its letters with at least one of the other words. It also happens to be the only one I'm touching (and seeing) right now. By the way, even in your mathematical explanation for desk egg is an odd one, if only because of the word itself defying the angular shape of the category choices.

  • @GetMeThere1
    @GetMeThere1 Před 5 měsíci +14

    Wow! I thought "friend" was so OBVIOUSLY the correct answer, and I was shocked you were even discussing this. I also have to admit surprise that it apparently wasn't the obvious answer for many. HOWEVER, I thought silver had to refer to the element and never considered it as a color. If I wanted to make such a test and use a color, I would have chosen UNAMBIGUOUS colors, like red, green, etc. THE MAIN PROBLEM, IMO, is that this particular sort of question for kids can only STIFLE their intelligence and creativity, IMO (IF, they were "told" that silver was the "correct" answer).

    • @rchild2151
      @rchild2151 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Of course there is no "correct answer." The lesson should not be about the words, their spellings or their meanings; it is about learning that questions can have more than one answer; and how to use facts to clearly explain to others how you made your choice. Never too early to start learning the elements of critical thinking and logical argument. Sadly, these skills are in very short supply these days.
      I especially like your thoughts on "silver." I've always had trouble thinking of silver as a color. I could never find it on a color wheel or chart nor anywhere on the electromagnetic spectrum. Can't find any way to create it using the colors that are on the spectrum nor the colors of pigments. Needs a "lustrous metallic sheen" according to the dictionary. Where can I find some of this stuff?

    • @zubinkynto
      @zubinkynto Před 5 měsíci +1

      Silver as an element is still an uncountable noun. It is a measurable noun, but an uncountable noun.
      If you are measuring silver, you are counting grams, or whatever measurement you're using.
      Also, if you use silver as a currency (e.g. 3 silver and 4 gold) then you're only using silver as an adjective and dropping the actual noun, which could be 'coin', as in silver coin. Therefore you're counting coins, not silvers.

  • @deerh2o
    @deerh2o Před 5 měsíci +14

    "Why is a raven like a writing desk?" is what this reminded me of (Alice in Wonderland reference). I chose egg, not only for the odd letters, but it is only one that started with a vowel.

    • @THall-vi8cp
      @THall-vi8cp Před 5 měsíci +1

      “Because it can produce a few notes, tho they are very flat; and it is never put with the wrong end in front!” (answer from Lewis Carroll)

    • @philrobson7976
      @philrobson7976 Před 5 měsíci

      @@THall-vi8cp I thought the answer was: Because there’s a be in both

    • @quiltguy1906
      @quiltguy1906 Před 5 měsíci

      The answer actually is: Because Poe wrote on both.

    • @THall-vi8cp
      @THall-vi8cp Před 5 měsíci

      @quiltguy1906
      Well, the answer I posted is the answer Lewis Carroll came up with after being pestered for one -- the riddle originally wasn't supposed to have an answer. He also originally spelled _never_ as "nevar" in the answer, which is _raven_ spelled backward.
      I do like the Poe answer, though. Quite clever.

    • @quiltguy1906
      @quiltguy1906 Před 5 měsíci

      A hat tip to you, my friend.@@THall-vi8cp

  • @viperion_nz
    @viperion_nz Před 5 měsíci

    "because the class had just done a lesson on nouns" - context is key, and explains why the parent was confused. For reference I went with "egg" because it's the only one that starts with a vowel (my reasoning being vowels vs consonants is something you'd learn at first grade)

  • @dhonsinger
    @dhonsinger Před 2 měsíci +1

    my first thought was friend because the other 4 are inanimate objects. then I thought egg because it's the only word with an odd number hence "odd one out"

  • @moebiusk9085
    @moebiusk9085 Před 5 měsíci +23

    Definitely a case where the context of what was being studied applies. Looking blind, my first thought was toothbrush because it's a compound word. My assumption being they might have been studying that rather than nouns vs adjectives.

    • @japanpanda2179
      @japanpanda2179 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I chose silver. Even if you consider silver a noun, it's an uncountable noun, while the other four are countable. You can have "a" or "an" before the others, a toothbrush, an egg, a friend, but you can't have "a silver".

    • @isaac_marcus
      @isaac_marcus Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@japanpanda2179 As a D&D player, you certainly can have "a silver" when it refers to the coin. Most dictionaries also list a form of it as countable noun when referring to silver medals like in the Olympics.
      Although that is I guess some kind of "colloquial noun" (not sure if there's a word for that) where an adjective gets turned into the noun. Like "a fifth" of alcohol. Or "a double" of alcohol. (I would really like to come up with a non-alcohol example so I don't appear like an alcoholic...)

    • @lovelydumpling
      @lovelydumpling Před 5 měsíci

      When I answered in the community post, I think I chose toothbrush for the same reason. But when watching this video, having forgotten my answer, I chose friend.

    • @MrMisticZ
      @MrMisticZ Před 5 měsíci +1

      First grade could also be animate vs inanimate objects, in which case "friend" is an odd one out.
      It also was the word that jumped out to me immediately.

    • @user-ti3ss5cy2u
      @user-ti3ss5cy2u Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@isaac_marcus I suppose "The good, the bad and the ugly" would be a good non-alcoholic example of such type of words ;)

  • @RevolutionibusOrbiumCoelestium
    @RevolutionibusOrbiumCoelestium Před 5 měsíci +11

    Yet the teacher will do exactly this and mark the other four answers as incorrect. This is what pissed me off when I was a kid. When I’d point this out to teachers I was told “well that’s not the answer I wanted” and was put in punishment for saying things like “no you need to write clearer questions then”. No wonder kids get disenfranchised at school when they are told they are “wrong” yet as we’ve just discussed 75% of respondents disagreed with the “correct” answer, yet gave a valid answer.

    • @rchild2151
      @rchild2151 Před 5 měsíci +2

      The teachers you describe should not be teachers.

    • @robinbennett3531
      @robinbennett3531 Před 5 měsíci

      Same as me at school. I assume it's to prepare you for a world full of idiots!

  • @anubiam3004
    @anubiam3004 Před 2 měsíci

    Only word with:
    Egg: started with vowel, odd number of letters, no "tall" letters (above the dotted line on K paper), repeated consecutive consonant, food item
    silver: adj, color
    toothbrush: word with 3 vowels, repeated vowel, 10 letters, 4 consecutive consonants, 2 sets of repeated consonants, no e
    desk: using k, 4 letters
    friend: using f, human

  • @OLDCHEMIST1
    @OLDCHEMIST1 Před 5 měsíci +1

    To me, toothbrush jumps out, as it is the only word composed of two ideas.

  • @Neckhawker
    @Neckhawker Před 5 měsíci +6

    The odd one out was us the whole time.

  • @stevechance150
    @stevechance150 Před 5 měsíci +15

    Silver is an element. All the other items are compounds.

    • @bosstowndynamics5488
      @bosstowndynamics5488 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Strictly speaking none of the items are compounds from a chemistry standpoint because eggs, friends, toothbrushes and desks don't have fixed compositions.

  • @DaveEtchells
    @DaveEtchells Před 5 měsíci

    Interesting to see so many ways of looking at the problem than how I did!

  • @danburch9989
    @danburch9989 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Each one can be the "odd one out" based upon the approach.
    Egg is a food, the rest are not
    Silver is a metal or color, the rest are not
    Friend is human, the rest are not
    You can sit and work at a desk.
    Toothbrush is the longest word, a compound word, the others are not.

    • @oyoo3323
      @oyoo3323 Před měsícem

      Friend is *animate*, not human.

    • @foxsimulation7630
      @foxsimulation7630 Před měsícem

      i think its egg because none of them are edible and egg is

  • @the-boy-who-lived
    @the-boy-who-lived Před 5 měsíci +5

    5:51 When he said 3, three Talwalkers spoke at the same time

  • @edl5731
    @edl5731 Před 5 měsíci +7

    I went with egg, because egg is an odd number. However, I thing to learn from this example is that almost all of the "here is an example of an impossible grade school problem" that you see on the internet are actually extremely trivial once you know what the kids are studying in school. If you had began the video with "a child that was studying the difference between nouns and adjectives was given the following question" the whole mystery of the video falls apart.

  • @volatex
    @volatex Před 11 dny

    for this kind of questions, answer really depends on how you approach the problem. that being said, toothbrush could be the odd one out as the other choices have the letter “e” in it or friend could be odd one out as the other choices can be purchased at a store. possibilities are endless.

  • @LuImElPr
    @LuImElPr Před 25 dny

    First thought is friend, friend is a concept. Where the other things are objects.
    Don't get the noun answer.
    As silver can be a noun As well.
    As example:
    I found silver. As in I found silver coins in an old chest.
    The adjective/ colour silver comes from the noun, not the other way around.

  • @brickviking667
    @brickviking667 Před 5 měsíci +4

    My concept behind choosing "friend" was that it was the only animate choice, as people usually have other people as friends. Eggs don't move on their own until hatching, toothbrush doesn't move without someone holding it, silver doesn't move unless it's a commodity price, and desks don't walk except in an earthquake.

  • @deannal.newton9772
    @deannal.newton9772 Před 5 měsíci +7

    I thought that toothbrush was the odd one out since it was the only word on the list that's a compound word. A compound word is a word that combines two or more words into a bigger word, the words "tooth" and "brush" are smaller words that can be combined into the word "toothbrush".

    • @johngaran6379
      @johngaran6379 Před 5 měsíci +1

      This was my thought since a first grader could be learning about compound words.

    • @DestroyerOfWombs
      @DestroyerOfWombs Před 5 měsíci +1

      Same

  • @monkfishy6348
    @monkfishy6348 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Silver is a noun, it's a precious metal with the atomic number 47... US education system out here just teaching students incorrect things. Yeesh. Reminds me of kids being taught that 1/0=0. Or that you should always do division before multiplication (or vice versa).

  • @KC3Lay
    @KC3Lay Před 4 měsíci +1

    All I saw was the picture thingy before you click on the video, but the answer was toothbrush because it's the only one that doesn't have an e.

  • @matthewblainey4254
    @matthewblainey4254 Před 5 měsíci +30

    Desk is the only word that lacks an etymological route from old english or german, it is unique in its latin origin. I would also say triangle number is a bit of a stretch as you can design a taylor series to miss and hit any given integer

    • @yurenchu
      @yurenchu Před 5 měsíci +2

      Although "toothbrush" was my first/immediate choice, I afterward also noticed that "desk" is the only word that doesn't look like its translation in Dutch ( _vriend_ = friend , _ei_ = egg , _tandenborstel_ = toothbrush , _zilver_ = silver ; _bureau_ = desk ), even though English and Dutch are both Germanic languages. I was unaware though that _desk_ has a Latin origin.
      If the argument "triangle number of letters" doesn't count, then the argument "odd number of letters" (for _egg_ ) doesn't count either.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Před 5 měsíci

      @@yurenchu In engish you can sit on any side of a desk (argueble, is a desk a table, though not all tables are desks) . A Bureau (or writing desk) has a leaf that folds down and normally forms part of the enclosure when not in use)

    • @yurenchu
      @yurenchu Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@highpath4776 Yeah, they are both called _bureau_ in Dutch. And there is no Dutch word that looks like the English word _desk_ , as far as I'm aware.

  • @glennchannell1241
    @glennchannell1241 Před 5 měsíci +16

    I always view these as exercises in lateral thinking. There is no ONE correct answer. As long as you can give a logical reason for your choice, your answer is correct. I will add that if the intent of the question was to reinforce a lesson on nouns vs. other parts of speech, "silver" is a poor choice for one of the options. Obviously silver can be used as an adjective, but it's also used as a noun. It depends on context. At a first grade level, if you want to lead them to a nouns vs. adjectives (or whatever part of speech) solution, you should pick a word without ambiguous or multiple uses.

    • @bosstowndynamics5488
      @bosstowndynamics5488 Před 5 měsíci

      It's such a strange choice for an adjective too, there's so many that would come to mind before it for most people if you asked them to think of a random adjective

    • @tychozzyx9439
      @tychozzyx9439 Před 5 měsíci

      As I've learned, the younger the target audience, the more assumptions get made on their thinking, knowledge, or frame of reference. Like logic tables that require differentiating boy and girl names to deduce the answer

    • @chad_bro_chill
      @chad_bro_chill Před 5 měsíci

      If they were learning about the different types of nouns, then silver might have been an intentional choice. You can have a single friend or desk, but silver is used as a mass noun, like sand. You can have one thing made of silver or one silver atom, or even refer to a silver coin as "one silver," but you can't have "one silver."

  • @handanyldzhan9232
    @handanyldzhan9232 Před 5 měsíci

    YMMV on that one.
    Egg is the only one starting with a vowel.
    Silver is the only one consisting of a single substance.
    Egg (yet again) is the only one that can't stay completely stable on a surface.
    Toothbrush is the only compound word.
    Egg (yes) is the only one with a letter covering space downwards (g).
    Silver (again) is the only one with a last letter covering the typical space for small/minuscule letters.

  • @JJP316
    @JJP316 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Silver is a metal. Friend is the only person. All the other are objects.

  • @ninjanoodle2674
    @ninjanoodle2674 Před 5 měsíci +13

    The CZcams poll numbers reflect the related demographics of the responding people. 49% don't have any friends, 23% had no money (silver), 15% hadn't brushed their teeth, 11% don't like to eat eggs, but only 3% weren't at or near a desk when they responded...

  • @jamm8284
    @jamm8284 Před 5 měsíci +21

    After all the different answers on the poll, I cant belive this is a first grade question 😂

    • @bosstowndynamics5488
      @bosstowndynamics5488 Před 5 měsíci +4

      There's a surprising number of examples floating around on the internet of questions written by teachers which were either outright wrong or nowhere near as specific as they thought, often in the form of test answers marked wrong even when the child gave an answer that any reasonable person would agree is correct

    • @THall-vi8cp
      @THall-vi8cp Před 5 měsíci +3

      Context is key. After learning about nouns, just about everyone would choose silver because it can be a noun or an adjective, whereas the the remaining four are squarely nouns.

    • @baileywatts1304
      @baileywatts1304 Před 5 měsíci +2

      First grade is a great time to teach kids that sometimes there isn't a singular clear right answer, and to encourage kids to think about how to defend their choices in the classroom. It's a good discussion question, not a good test question.

  • @GazilionPT
    @GazilionPT Před 2 dny

    "Desk" being the odd one out because it's the only one without an obvious reason to be the odd one out reminded me of the anecdote of a guy that made it to the Guinness Book of World Records because he had set the world record of failed attempts to make it to the Guinness Book of World Records. 😁

  • @DeltaDemon1
    @DeltaDemon1 Před 5 měsíci

    I chose Friend because friend is a concept while all the others are physical (silver being physical metal)...I don't really have conviction on this and could be convinced of another answer but that is pretty much all I could come up with in 15 seconds.
    One of the things I like about the question is that there is space to prove your point. So as long as your choice makes sense, you can prove it and get the point. Of course, this is a difficult question for first graders.