Who's to blame for English Spelling

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  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024

Комментарии • 107

  • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
    @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад +19

    This one took a while but I had fun with the VFX. It’s part of a series on English spelling that can be watched in any order.

  • @danielposavec7215
    @danielposavec7215 Год назад +31

    The bit with the Nirman guy speaking Swedish French is hilarious 😂

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад +4

      Glad you enjoyed that.

    • @peterdean8009
      @peterdean8009 11 месяцев назад +5

      I once worked with a teacher who taught Spanish with a broad Lancashire accent, not as a joke either!

    • @danielposavec7215
      @danielposavec7215 11 месяцев назад

      @@peterdean8009 😂

  • @lynettesherburne
    @lynettesherburne Год назад +16

    Am a woman, find your channel fascinating, especially as I work with Americans (I live in the UK). Many of their pronunciations actually make sense... schedule (as in school) & router or route as in "out" or "our". I spend a lot of time explaining how to pronounce place names in the UK 😁🤣

    • @multilingualmotociclista
      @multilingualmotociclista 11 месяцев назад

      When you figure out how to pronounce place names (or indeed any proper nouns) from the UK without asking the people who live there how they say it, you will please let all of us Brits know too! 😂

  • @harryc5951
    @harryc5951 Год назад +14

    Great video Dave, love the skits, the enthusiasm and the inclusivity. Top stuff.

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад

      Haha, glad you enjoyed the skits! I try to bring the laughs and keep things entertaining. Thanks for watching!

  • @laurabasola4081
    @laurabasola4081 Год назад +12

    I am a woman who loves your channel. So thank you 😊

  • @Hurlebatte
    @Hurlebatte Год назад +11

    These are the impressions I'm currently under:
    1) Æ fell out of use around 1250 after its long value merged with the long value of EA and its short value merged with the short value of A.
    2) Ð lost its (redundant) role to Þ around 1250.
    3) Þ survived the Normans. It's not unusual to see it in English manuscripts from like 1400.
    4) Ƿ started getting swapped out for a French style W ligature shortly after 1066.

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад +4

      Fascinating. Thanks for sharing that in-depth knowledge. Looks like I got Number 4 right, at least.

    • @Hurlebatte
      @Hurlebatte Год назад +3

      You could be right about Number 1. Maybe Norman scribes really did ask Anglo-Saxons how to pronounce Æ, and maybe Norman scribes found it redundant and ditched it, leading to a new spelling trend.
      I didn't mean to imply I think you're wrong about Number 1.

    • @7MPhonemicEnglish
      @7MPhonemicEnglish 11 месяцев назад

      Bad characters took an exit especially when folks got a good look at the hen scratch handwriting of professors, doctors and lawyers. You realize the need to keep the letters as simple as possible!

  • @cargumdeu
    @cargumdeu Год назад +7

    I wonder sometimes whether bringing back Latin into schools could reverse falling standards in education. A few years back there were some primary schools teaching it for fun and the after-school classes were said to be heavily oversubscribed. Left-leaning academics 50 years ago told us it wasnt what you learned at school that was important, but that it was the learning process itself that was the main thing. Consequently the argument that 'it's a dead language, what's the point' is, according to them, an irrelevant one. On the plus side it seems to help with logic and higher cognitive function. I think learning latin as useful in that respect as learning chess, or contract bridge. Apologies for waffling on.

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад +3

      I think there should be a greater emphasis on language learning, but I’d prefer modern languages. Learning any language has cognitive benefits.

    • @StillAliveAndKicking_
      @StillAliveAndKicking_ Год назад

      That would have led to me playing truant. I even hated French, mainly because when I started it at age 11, everyone else had already done it for several years, and no attempt was made to help me catch up. 50 years later, and it still rankles. No, I’m joking. But languages have to be taught in a more interesting way.

    • @cargumdeu
      @cargumdeu Год назад +1

      @@StillAliveAndKicking_ I think its popular because they make it fun and its aimed at 9 and 10 yearolds before theyve become jaded by too much learning. I share your difficulty with French, we could never get our mouths round their vowels without laughing or sounding ridiculous. The French teacher was a 1-eyed Welshman who gave us 5 words a day to learn, which we wrote on our arms or knees rather than memorize. Only 3 or 4 of a class of 25 passed the exam in my school.

  • @KiwiExpressCream
    @KiwiExpressCream Год назад +5

    Brilliant, and I loved the skits which I'm sure were much harder to film than it appears 🤓

  • @StillAliveAndKicking_
    @StillAliveAndKicking_ Год назад +5

    It always seems to me that English would be so much better if the spelling was sorted out. But as soon as one small change is made, the Daily Mail mob emerges shouting “down with woke, save our heritage, we didn’t win the war to lose our language” and so on.

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад +3

      Ðe Meil wud lav it. Kan’t sii ol ðe kantriz agriiing iiðe. US stil dasn’t hæv metrik sistem!

    • @notwithouttext
      @notwithouttext Год назад +1

      the problem is everyone does these things which SEEM good but actually aren't
      - getting rid of c, q, x
      - using only one accent
      - making MULTIPLE spellings for EACH accent
      - making a different script

    • @StillAliveAndKicking_
      @StillAliveAndKicking_ Год назад

      @@DaveHuxtableLanguages Ha ha. Actually … in Americaland the SI system has officially been the preferred system for trade and commerce. It’s just that no-one uses it.

  • @llouebeeth
    @llouebeeth Год назад +4

    Woman word nerd here! Our language is so fascinating!

  • @Anabriella
    @Anabriella 10 месяцев назад

    Your channel was randomly suggested to me by RUclips. Interesting and educational - thank you! \o/

  • @BurningSkyy
    @BurningSkyy Год назад +12

    Wonderful video, it's interesting to learn why English language is how it is. The skits and VFX are nice too, it's all very Huxtable. Also, would love to see more on accents and slang. Keep on rockin Mr H, you're a damn good teacher.
    Apologies for my English, I'm English and we don't speak that round here 🤔

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад +1

      Thanks. Glad you liked it.

    • @BurningSkyy
      @BurningSkyy Год назад +1

      @DaveHuxtableLanguages and thank you too. I'm glad you had fun making it and I'm glad that you're glad that I enjoyed it. Through tough thorough thought n all that. Joking aside, I look forward to the next video. It really is a fascinating subject. Have a nice evening.

    • @Scott-i9v2s
      @Scott-i9v2s 11 месяцев назад

      @GonadNomad10 Not to worry about 'I'm English and we don't speak that round here'; English is also not spoken in the Americas. Despite the country Belize over there being multi-lingual in English (4 different flavours: UK-English, US-English, Belizean Kriol, & the mix of those 3).

  • @garycpriestley
    @garycpriestley Год назад +3

    So much to love here but you talking to your multiple personalities is my fav.... ❤ but seriously, discovering the origin of the unusual spelling is glorious

  • @user-n7a55m3a1
    @user-n7a55m3a1 2 месяца назад

    According to the site "Wiktionary", "o" was pronounced as [u] or similar sound in Old French. Is it the reason why in words like "move, money, love" is spelled "o", but is pronounced [u] (in northern parts of England)?

  • @rosiefay7283
    @rosiefay7283 11 месяцев назад +1

    A woman word nerd here!
    0:47 "About 300 years later when English started to rise up again". That's interesting. I didn't know English had ever gone away. So does this mean that there's no direct descent of ME from OE?

    • @georgina3358
      @georgina3358 11 месяцев назад

      Good question

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  11 месяцев назад

      Under the Normans, English had become a peasant language which people thought incapable of expressing nuances and advanced thinking. It didn’t go away, but it lost prestige. I’d say there’s indirect descent from OE to ME since ME has so much French and Scandinavian. OE- speaking time travellers wouldn’t understand ME.

  • @MrBlack-wt5er
    @MrBlack-wt5er 6 месяцев назад

    This makes so much sense, thanks for explaining my dyslexia problem.

  • @freyjasvansdottir9904
    @freyjasvansdottir9904 Год назад +1

    I as a woman have already pointed more women to this channel…

  • @UTleochi
    @UTleochi 11 месяцев назад +1

    Just discovered your channel today, and I’m already utterly charmed and mesmerised. As an ESL teacher (female, too!😅) I often have debates with my students regarding the oddities of English spelling versus pronunciation. This channel definitely will become one of my favourites. Thank you so much for sharing your linguistic knowledge in such an engaging way.

  • @michaelbednarski4601
    @michaelbednarski4601 10 месяцев назад

    Why are one and two not wun and tōō? Were one and two pronounced "oan" and "twoa?" Are eight and ate homonyms in British English?

  • @vielendanker
    @vielendanker Год назад +3

    I love these videos Dave, keep 'em coming. They are just so interesting! :)

  • @7MPhonemicEnglish
    @7MPhonemicEnglish 11 месяцев назад

    I've been calling them Clowns all this time. I should have guessed that the Clowns were actually intellectuals.

  • @timflatus
    @timflatus 11 месяцев назад

    William the Conq may not have been familiar with loose Persian trousers.

  • @Manonthemoon777
    @Manonthemoon777 10 месяцев назад

    You’re so cute and adorable. Love your creativity

  • @lorena3528
    @lorena3528 Год назад +2

    I laughed so hard at "E pluribus omnibus" XD

  • @giglet52
    @giglet52 9 месяцев назад

    I'm a woman too!!! Yaaay.
    But seriously I love this channel. Its all very fascinating.
    My love for my own language (english) started once I began learning another language (spanish) and could compare so much.
    Now I love watching all this history of language.
    Thank you xx

  • @AlphaGeekgirl
    @AlphaGeekgirl 11 месяцев назад

    OMG! so you aren’t really Australian!?
    I just came from your other video about Australian accent, and I swore you must’ve been an Aussie. Good on you! Bonza mate!

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  11 месяцев назад

      That’s cool. Thanks for letting me know. Now you know why I got the date of the first fleet wrong!

  • @mcrow312166
    @mcrow312166 4 месяца назад

    My whole family loves your stuff Dave. Thanks for making it.

  • @no1fanofthepals
    @no1fanofthepals Год назад +2

    woah the vfx is great

  • @DSQueenie
    @DSQueenie 10 месяцев назад

    You are very hilarious 😂 6:14

  • @duduphiliac
    @duduphiliac 3 месяца назад

    i didnt know i was so boyish😂

  • @1234j
    @1234j Год назад +1

    Excellent.
    Gordon really IS an inkhorn, too.😂

  • @eduardoalfonso3765
    @eduardoalfonso3765 10 месяцев назад

    Fraggle rock 5:35

  • @woolly254
    @woolly254 Год назад +2

    I love the videos! Keep them up man ❤

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад

      Thanks, man! I'll keep making them as long as you keep watching and I don't run out of ideas!

  • @Min-or3xh
    @Min-or3xh 10 месяцев назад

    Noice shirt Davo!

  • @Khandiee
    @Khandiee 10 месяцев назад

    I’m a woman 😂

  • @caramelldansen2204
    @caramelldansen2204 5 месяцев назад

    :)

  • @oldtimesong
    @oldtimesong 10 месяцев назад

    I'm a woman and I find your channel incredibly interesting! you just popped up on my feed and I'm already in love.

  • @welshboo1
    @welshboo1 Год назад

    Another great video! I've been reading 'The Loom of Language' 1943 Bodmer. UK is like America, we are surrounded by water and people don't attempt to speak another language. Yet English is such a mongrel language, and therefore an advantage over others.

  • @s_nord2800
    @s_nord2800 11 месяцев назад

    Really well done! Informative, precise, neat, brief and entertaining. Thanks a lot, sir.

  • @shaqm0bile
    @shaqm0bile Год назад +1

    Awesome video! Have you done a video on why english spelling and pronunciation vary wildly, to the point of dropping entire syllables?
    Leicestershire = Lester
    As west coast American, I'm sure we do the same thing in our own way and don't notice, but it makes some words unpredictable.

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад +3

      Leicestershire = Lestershə
      I think it often happens with place names in that local people say them over and over for hundreds of years and they get shortened. Others then learn that pronunciation to show that they're in the know. US examples would be Poughkeepsie, Arkansas, Des Moines. The only one that comes to mind on the West Coast is Van Nuys, which is pronounced locally with just one /n/.

    • @shaqm0bile
      @shaqm0bile Год назад

      Right on! Thank you :)
      @@DaveHuxtableLanguages

    • @foolishwatcher
      @foolishwatcher Год назад +1

      @@DaveHuxtableLanguages Hi Dave, I'm pretty sure that the pronunciation vs writing mismatch of US place names like Poughkeepsie, Arkansas and many others comes from the native American origins of the word for which no writing system existed (at least none understandable to the Europeans)

  • @TomSleeUK
    @TomSleeUK Год назад

    When we say 'chunky monkey', why is it not 'munkey'. How long have we pronounced it Munkey?

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад

      As far as I can tell, we've always said it with a - originally like in . I don't know where the spelling comes from.

  • @benedettobruno1669
    @benedettobruno1669 Год назад

    Well, the Soviet Union got rid of its Communist system and survived.
    I know it does sound impossible to do but I would love the British to come up with a new spelling system that matche their pronunciation

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад

      We'd have to get lots of countries to agree - some of which are very resistant to change.

  • @lgzster
    @lgzster Год назад

    Could you do a video about the west country accent and why in some respects it seems similar to Canadian and American English?

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад

      I need to do research on different accents in the west - people rightly said I shouldn't lump them all together.

  • @FlyingForFunTrecanair
    @FlyingForFunTrecanair Год назад

    Brilliant! 🤣

  • @monumento.f.501
    @monumento.f.501 Год назад

    Thus Guillaume was responsible for W?

  • @danielstahl5028
    @danielstahl5028 Год назад

    OU taught me something I never knew!

  • @biscuit715
    @biscuit715 Год назад

    I hate digraphs. I will never forgive William...

  • @Miss_Toots
    @Miss_Toots Год назад

    Fascinating. Thank you

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад

      Thank you so much for your kind words! I'm thrilled that you found it fascinating!

  • @PeIeus
    @PeIeus Год назад

    I love my dad

  • @fukpoeslaw3613
    @fukpoeslaw3613 Год назад +1

    1:11 à 1:15 His explanation delivered PARFAIT !! I was literally laughing out loud hard and almost fell of my sofa.
    About the 17% maybe RUclips is wathed mostly by men so wie so.
    (I have to admit my sofa is a bit wobbly)
    .

  • @notwithouttext
    @notwithouttext Год назад +2

    can we all agree that the long s was uſeleſs for ſpelling?

  • @rabha1754
    @rabha1754 Год назад +3

    What did the letter yogh (ʒ) do to offend you that it was dropped from your list of lost letters? Such a blatant example of anti-yoghism! It's still remembered by using a z in names such as Dalziel (Dee-ell), Menzies (Ming-ees) and MacFadzean )MacFadyen). 😄
    P.S. I loved the video, especially the VFX.