they remind me of the vine where ron sneezes and scares a deer away and the lady recording says "Nice, Ron!" and he responds "I sneezed! Oh, I'm not allowed to sneeze?"
The fact so many years went in-between is what kills me. I just imagine Arin's in a social situation and the only things he can think of to say are "Are burgers a sandwich" and "Nice coat"
not only do they argue like kids, Arin comes up with arguments kids would have, like "Burgers and hot dogs are sandwiches, change my mind" and "White is bright, change my mind."
The white is bright one isn't a good example. That was effecting the game they were playing that episode and they had different ideas of what "bright" was.
@@neetraptor Not in the art world no, white is considered light because light = towards white while dark = towards black. Bright is intensity, white can be bright but it isn’t always. The white (and blue) shown in the image is light and not bright.
Arin had an argument with HIMSELF about burgers being sandwiches on TWO SEPERATE OCCASIONS. Both times, Dan just didn't argue whatsoever. Also, about the Nevada debate: it is pronounced like Arin says, but Nevada natives changed it overtime. It's like how "Los Angeles" should be lohs ahn-he-les because it is also Spanish The point is, it doesn't fucking matter
no its not an anglicized version of nieve. It's a full ass word in Spanish. Nevada means snowy or snowed in Spanish. And Arin's pronunciation doesn't even sound anything Spanish related. Like his "da" is so soft that it rounds like a Spanish "ra" and it's so distracting that I can't even tell the difference between the two options (they both sound like anglicized Spanish to me) so even if he's right that the word is Spanish it doesn't hold up in his argument 😂 like all I hear is "It's not Nevura it's Nevaera!" (had to edit bc of fucking autocorrect)
the bloodborne epsiode where they pause the game to argue about which ninja turtle was the leader is fucking hilarious. actual elementary school argument.
I know the Nevada thing has been beaten to death, and it's not that I care at all, it's just really funny that Arin is taking that stance while literally living in *Los Angeles*
As a native Spanish speaker the Nevada argument was so fucking hilarious because I couldn't tell the difference between the two options. Like, yes, Nevada is a Spanish word (means snowy) but Arin's pronunciation doesn't sound Spanish at all 😂
@@octoberbabyyy Both pronunciations are accepted, but the state gets its name from Sierra Nevada, Snowy Mountains, insSpanish. So it actually makes sense to pronounce it like Arin does
@@icp7201 No, because the way Arin pronounces it isn’t how it’s pronounced in Spanish. In Spanish it’s Ne-vad-a, not Ne-vod-a. Arin is making an America-centric assumption that the latter sound is “foreign” so it must be how a Spanish word is pronounced.
@@MigTheBird in Spanish, vowels typically have one way of saying them. He’s correct, he’s just using schwas. Edit: my source is that Spanish is my first language.
If you make a part two, please add the Wack-a-Mole game when Arin tells Dan the wrong rights and lefts. “I DON’T KNOW! BUT YOU SAID YES!!!” Gets me every time. 😂😂😂
Arin confidently confusing bright and light colors makes me want to scream through the screen. Same with him calling every bright pink he sees “hot pink.” You’re an artist man!
Arin arguing about Nevada's pronunciation due to it's language origins is on par as someone saying you must call Mexico like "Mehico" because that's how they say it but no one from Mexico never corrects anyone about it.
Every time, everytime with the double negatives lmao, "noone from mexico never corrects anyone" by proper reading says "everyone from mexico corrects everyone about it."
I can't remember what game they were playing right off the top of my head, but they not only argued about which Ninja Turtle is the leader again, but it was nearly the exact same argument. Like, practically word for word
I just imagine that the Game Grumps Matrix glitched there, causing them to completely forget the fact that they have had the same conversation down to the plot before. 😂😂😂
A burger is a sandwich. A sandwich is just ingredients with 2 slices of bread either side to make it easier to hold. Why is he mad? Has anyone actually debated hard with him that burgers aren't sandwiches?
In his defense I've had people claim that burgers aren't sandwiches to me (the logic there is that they're cooked, apparently. it didn't hold up very well)
@@dearoldmold Majorioty of the comments appears to be folks ellecting to be angry with Arin in lieu of acknowledging the bits are bits. I'm sure they know. Just wanna be mad. You know, like a bit. A bit Arin would do.
Can we just take a single second to think about the fact that the Spanish word Nevada means snow? I love how Arin is focused on the pronunciation, when no one even says it right anyway, instead of how one of the top three hottest states in the United States of crack den weather America is named with a word that means *snow*. I love these two more than my life 😂
Also the Nevada thing was ridiculous. I live in Colorado and only transplants(people who’ve moved here) pronounce it Colo rA DOE or Colo Rah Doe. It’s one word, continuous.. Colorado, phonetically: Call luh rah doe. All mushed together. In the bigger, broader scope of things. I personally have very few hills I stand or die on, 😂 I just let things be.
My opinion that literally no one asked for: The colloquial definition of a sandwich is a food item that consists of two units of bread with assorted fillings between them, yes? The other day, I got an ad in the email about the return of the Double Down at KFC. For those who are unaware, the Double Down is an abomination that consists of two breaded fried chicken patties with cheese, bacon, and sauce in between. That is literally it. (No bread at all.) The full name of the menu item? "The KFC Double Down Sandwich". Maybe we shouldn't be getting linguistic or categorization lessons from corporations that care more about how something is marketed to the masses than it being an accurate description of the item in question.
Since sandwich can be used as a verb to put something between two of anything (doesn’t have to be bread) I posit that a sandwich does not have to contain bread
to be fair Canada come from the word Kanata which is literally pronounced like that which is the indigenous word for village (learned that on a history commercial) also I'm canadian :P
The nevada thing is literally just arin trying to make people say the name of an area in the original language. And if that's the case, I guess he doesn't say any other city in any other country in English either, then? How do you pronounce "stockholm" then, sir? Because there is a Swedish way of saying it.
Arin is right about the original pronunciation of Nevada but words change pronunciation with time...by his logic, Los Angeles would be pronounced Lös Anhëlës, New Mexico would be Nuevo Mehico, Texas would be Tehas, etc.
@@charliecox8867 still have not clue but I’m gonna start rewatching some series and the sonic saga is on that list (minus frontiers because I still remember that play)
"You are in Ioway" I always thought it was pronounced iowah? "It is." But he just said- "We pronounce it that way but we don't like it when other people say it"
I never thought about the fact that when Arin talks about NevAda pronunciation and says what language has the “ahh” sound, his name LITERALLY STARTS WITH THAT SOUND!! Try it, NevAda, Arin, 😂😂😂
coming back to Arin's argument about hanburgers being sandwiches, Im of the mindset that hotdogs should be categorized as "tacos" cause they have a "shell" on 3 sides I don't think this is the place to air that and I apologize but I had to get it out there
This just makes me more convinced that Arin is a child locked in the body of a grown man, with no way of escaping. He comes up with arguments like the color white, sandwiches, Nevada, and now this. You made my day. ❤
"...the most logical explanation is Ne-vah-dah" Yeah, well the most logical spelling of Pittsburgh was actually "Pittsburg" but we decided that looked dumb so we put the H back, Arin. Not everything has to make sense phonetically, and holding English up above all languages to constantly follow even its own rules for pronunciation is a fool's errand
Ok but like a burger is a type of sandwich we just dont refer to it as a sandwich because its a specific kind. Thats like saying shears arent scissors they ARE scissors just meant for sheep and stuff
3:45 no it's not. it's true that the are other times that define a sandwich before just "does it have the word sandwich in the name," but hot dogs do not follow all of those rules and therefore do not classify as sandwiches. they're shitty sausages. the main defining feature of a sandwich is the reliance on it being encased in some sort of bread based outer part. of course there are variations, like open face or hinge cut sandwiches which only use single pieces of bread, so it's not necessarily a requirement that it has "exactly two pieces of bread, one on top one on bottom," or wrap/pita/flatbread sandwiches, which use different bread-based wrappings. however, the important distinction between a sandwich and a non sandwich food item that you can put in a bun is thus: if you remove said food item from the bread, and it continues to be identified as that same food item, it's not a sandwich. for example: if you take the bread off of a hamburger, it's no longer a sandwich. now it's just a slab of ground beef. if you remove the bread from a Philly cheese steak, now it's just a bunch of shaved steak and cheese. if you remove the tortilla from a veggie wrap, it's no longer a sandwich, now it's a salad. but if you remove the bread from a hot dog, IT'S STILL A HOT DOG. therefore the hot dog is its own independent type of food item that you can have with a bun as an accessory and not a sandwich.
TBH i dont fully understand arin point with the white Isnt it common for people to say "oh thats bright" to highly saturated/ neon colours? maybe its an artist thing idk
i feel like the question was doomed from the start, since it can allow different interpretations to mess things up. _technically_ white can certainly be considered a bright color, but that’s probably not what a lot of people would see it as in the moment. to make a long story short- the boys are silly
@@Slvt4Bread now i feel especially silly, because i could’ve sworn white was a shade, but double checked before posting and saw some ppl think of it as a color? i’m with you though, i’ve always thought white and black were shades (which i should’ve known as an art student, but i let doubt get to me lmao)
Brian does not have a podcast, and I think Dan said “one of” his podcasts like they’re ones he’s a fan of. If you google it it looks like there are a ton of good ones
A hotdog is not a Sandwich. A sandwich is toppings Sandwiched in-between two pieces of "bread". A hotdog is surrounded on 3 sides by 1 bun, thus is not a sandwich.
Listen, Arin is right on the Nevada thing because my first language is spanish and the way he pronounces it makes much more sense cos it's a Spanish fucking word!
Love Arins NevAAda, NevAhda debate. Also just because your from a place doesn't mean you say it correctly, St. Louis, is properly said St. Lewey, but people who live there and have all their lives call it St. Lewis. And they're wrong.
Food definitions are a function of the context in which you're talking about them. For instance By law in most countries, Burgers have to be labelled a sandwich because that's how they're taxed and marketed and what health standards need to apply. Culturally, they're not typically sandwiches, because you don't go for burger sandwiches, you go for burgers. Historically, burger can refer to just the type of meat, which holds an entirely different function. And if you're talking about the etymology or linguistics of it, you have to go by what the most popular consensus of the term burger might be. There's no point just saying "A burger is a sandwich" because that adds no significant information whatsoever.
I frequently disagree with Arin about vocabulary stuff, but he's objectively correct about Nevada. The problem is that it's colloquially mispronounced.
they remind me of the vine where ron sneezes and scares a deer away and the lady recording says "Nice, Ron!" and he responds "I sneezed! Oh, I'm not allowed to sneeze?"
That’s exactly what they’re like!! 😂
Huh, that really is them isn’t it
I saw that again recently it’s awesome
That’s so true 😂
This is actually incredibly accurate.
It's always arin aggressively dying on a hill and dan standing by like please. arin. just get up.
You mean like when Arin wholeheartedly believes White is a "bright color," despite being an artist?
@@gorillazhead i cant think of any color brighter than white
Danny watching Arin fall on his sword on an empty hilltop: babe please
@@Oddball_1943 y’all ever look at those neons that give you eye strain irl
@Odd Ball I hate that this is technically true. Besides neon colors I guess.
I love it when danny's like "okay dude. Im not even arguing" and arin just dies alone on a hill he built himself lol
he piled the dirt on the hill that he's willing to die on
They either fight like children or like an old married couple there's no in between
I dunno man. They’re moving into their “Content with Their Life Partner” era. Well, for the most part 🤣
are they siblings or are they married compilations XD
it's always funny when arin tries to pick a fight with dan, and then dan is like "oh, okay" and tries to move on with the conversation
something about arin yelling about a burger being a sandwich two seperate times really says something about him
The fact so many years went in-between is what kills me. I just imagine Arin's in a social situation and the only things he can think of to say are "Are burgers a sandwich" and "Nice coat"
@@Its_How_You_Play_The_Game lol UH HUH UH HUH UH HUH
HE'S RIGHT THOUGH
Burger _is_ a sandwich tho 😐
@@_Reikiiro IT FUCKING IS LIKE, FUNDAMENTALLY, IT IS
not only do they argue like kids, Arin comes up with arguments kids would have, like "Burgers and hot dogs are sandwiches, change my mind" and "White is bright, change my mind."
White IS bright, it's just not A colour, it's ALL colours
Oh shit they've infected me with their kid argument disease
well that's how it is in the art world, i personally can comprehend it the same way yk
The white is bright one isn't a good example. That was effecting the game they were playing that episode and they had different ideas of what "bright" was.
@@neetraptor Not in the art world no, white is considered light because light = towards white while dark = towards black.
Bright is intensity, white can be bright but it isn’t always.
The white (and blue) shown in the image is light and not bright.
no, yall are not about to do this here 🤣
Also Dan and Arin in the Newly Wed Game 10MPH: "We've never fought."
Because it's not a fight, it's an argument. There's a difference
@@cejayidc also it's Arin screaming about these things and Dan not giving a single shit about what Arin is *Trying* to argue
None of these are real fights, Arin isn’t actually angry 😂 it’s all to entertain us
@@jordandill7863 Dan: I'M NOT ARGUING WITH YOU
@@GBfanatic15 well maybe you should of maybe that’ll prove that you love me
Arin had an argument with HIMSELF about burgers being sandwiches on TWO SEPERATE OCCASIONS.
Both times, Dan just didn't argue whatsoever.
Also, about the Nevada debate: it is pronounced like Arin says, but Nevada natives changed it overtime. It's like how "Los Angeles" should be lohs ahn-he-les because it is also Spanish
The point is, it doesn't fucking matter
I'm not sure Arin is right anymore. Navada isn't a spanish word. it's an anglicized version of the Spanish word nieve.
no its not an anglicized version of nieve. It's a full ass word in Spanish. Nevada means snowy or snowed in Spanish.
And Arin's pronunciation doesn't even sound anything Spanish related. Like his "da" is so soft that it rounds like a Spanish "ra" and it's so distracting that I can't even tell the difference between the two options (they both sound like anglicized Spanish to me) so even if he's right that the word is Spanish it doesn't hold up in his argument 😂 like all I hear is "It's not Nevura it's Nevaera!"
(had to edit bc of fucking autocorrect)
@@ChibiChidorii Totally right, google screwed me over when I looked it up.
G's exist in Spanish
@@kevinsundelin8639 yes, and 9 times out of 10 they make an H sound
the bloodborne epsiode where they pause the game to argue about which ninja turtle was the leader is fucking hilarious. actual elementary school argument.
also makes me laugh because I have zero opinion about it but they BOTH got kinda heated about it XD
@GBfanatic15 what made me laugh is actually agreed with Arin on it lol
"THOSE dumplings aren't the same as THESE dumplings which are ALL DUMPLINGS."
How is no one talking about how arin said a hawk was a mammal. Even by accident or in rage that's some mistake
The Arin-Berdly parallels are insane (both don’t know birds aren’t mammals (and therefore have no nipples))
How did I not catch that
"HE'S NOT THE LEADER!"
I know the Nevada thing has been beaten to death, and it's not that I care at all, it's just really funny that Arin is taking that stance while literally living in *Los Angeles*
To be absolutely fair, he lives in Glendale.
My soul was evicted from my body when Arin referred to Hawks as mammals.
Dan: "Trying to illicit sympathy from the audience".
Arin: "Oh, when I act like a petulant child?! Yeah that always works!" 🤣
im surprised this isnt 14 hours long
I’m *sad* this isn’t 14 hours long. 😂
As a native Spanish speaker the Nevada argument was so fucking hilarious because I couldn't tell the difference between the two options. Like, yes, Nevada is a Spanish word (means snowy) but Arin's pronunciation doesn't sound Spanish at all 😂
There's something magical about the dynamic these two share on mic
"What language has that A sound?"
A lot, Arin, and some will be quite particular about front and back vowels
I think he was trying to convey "where in English do we have that sound?" supporting the hypothesis of Nevada coming from Spanish, not English.
@@CuteCuteJames he's still wrong tho lol
@@octoberbabyyy Both pronunciations are accepted, but the state gets its name from Sierra Nevada, Snowy Mountains, insSpanish. So it actually makes sense to pronounce it like Arin does
@@icp7201 No, because the way Arin pronounces it isn’t how it’s pronounced in Spanish. In Spanish it’s Ne-vad-a, not Ne-vod-a. Arin is making an America-centric assumption that the latter sound is “foreign” so it must be how a Spanish word is pronounced.
@@MigTheBird in Spanish, vowels typically have one way of saying them. He’s correct, he’s just using schwas.
Edit: my source is that Spanish is my first language.
Fibber is maybe the funniest thing that a grown man can call another grown man. so dramatic and yet so low stakes
If you make a part two, please add the Wack-a-Mole game when Arin tells Dan the wrong rights and lefts.
“I DON’T KNOW! BUT YOU SAID YES!!!” Gets me every time. 😂😂😂
"You're saying oh geez like the world's about to end"
*literally playing Majoras Mask a game where the world is about to end* 💀
Arin confidently confusing bright and light colors makes me want to scream through the screen. Same with him calling every bright pink he sees “hot pink.” You’re an artist man!
5:00
oh yeah I forgot that time that Arin, the artist, doesn't understand the most basic fundamentals of color theory
He may be an artist, but he's also an idiot 🤣
Arin getting all heated about Nevada being pronounced a certain way because it's a Spanish word, as if the state of Montana doesn't exist.
The state of Mon Ton Ah
@@lonesavior Close. Montaña.
it HAS to rhyme with hannah, contractually
And Colorado
And Florida ffs
6:21 I love Danny’s callback to the legendary Mitch Hedberg. RIP Mitch
I just realized that arin was basically having a meltdown over potato puttahtoe tomato tomahto with Nevada and Nevahda 😂
Arin arguing about Nevada's pronunciation due to it's language origins is on par as someone saying you must call Mexico like "Mehico" because that's how they say it but no one from Mexico never corrects anyone about it.
Every time, everytime with the double negatives lmao, "noone from mexico never corrects anyone" by proper reading says "everyone from mexico corrects everyone about it."
@@flooboo1502 I am going to keep it the way it is just for the anger it causes.
The world needs problems in order for its inhabitants to survive.
A hamburger is a sandwich the way a square is a rectangle - technically, but who cares, you'll never refer to it as one.
One that stands out to me is when they’re playing Monopoly and it goes from stupid dinosaur to Dan screaming “oh I’ll see yOU IN HELL”
Arin.... thinks birds are mammals.... ffs he's a special sunbeam
He dropped out of high school give him a break 🥴
@@duckduckgooseberry7051 i forgot he was a 'bad kid' to quote dan
@@alwynjaegar1778 he only made it to "the second one" 😩
@Duck Duck Gooseberry I loved that's what he refered to as sophomore 😅
I can't remember what game they were playing right off the top of my head, but they not only argued about which Ninja Turtle is the leader again, but it was nearly the exact same argument. Like, practically word for word
I just imagine that the Game Grumps Matrix glitched there, causing them to completely forget the fact that they have had the same conversation down to the plot before. 😂😂😂
A burger is a sandwich. A sandwich is just ingredients with 2 slices of bread either side to make it easier to hold. Why is he mad? Has anyone actually debated hard with him that burgers aren't sandwiches?
In his defense I've had people claim that burgers aren't sandwiches to me (the logic there is that they're cooked, apparently. it didn't hold up very well)
People actually believe Arin is mad when he does bits like that?
What about subs where the bread isn't split all the way through, are they still sandwiches?
@@dearoldmold Majorioty of the comments appears to be folks ellecting to be angry with Arin in lieu of acknowledging the bits are bits. I'm sure they know. Just wanna be mad. You know, like a bit. A bit Arin would do.
@@Cryptospuridiom I mean, there's a reason why I asked instead of just assuming. But thanks.
"What language has Ä ? Other than English"
*Sweats in Nordic*
Crazy how the plunger argument makes me irrationally angry every time (I agree with Dan).
Can we just take a single second to think about the fact that the Spanish word Nevada means snow? I love how Arin is focused on the pronunciation, when no one even says it right anyway, instead of how one of the top three hottest states in the United States of crack den weather America is named with a word that means *snow*.
I love these two more than my life 😂
According to the cube food rule a hot dog is a taco
n o
I read this title as
"Game Grumps accuse each other of liking children"
I definitely have dyslexia haha
9:25 reminds me of when he yelled at Dan about the "Horse" in chess
HOW did you NOT end it with Arin admitting he was completely wrong about Nevada?
i always get too much into these fake arguments like “YEAH IT IS A SANDWICH”
arin called birds mammals lol
Arin is a man who owns at least two companies
But he'll never own 5 ovens
Okay surely SOME people from there say it like arin
like just statistically
That plunger thing would have sent me. Man doesn’t know the difference between bright colours and light colours.
listen I would almost understand his vague argument if HE WEREN'T A LITERAL ARTIST XD
4:26 Arin's laugh here makes me think of the vending machines in the first BioShock game
Watching the owl house again just makes the first clip seem like papa titan and the collector passing the time all those years
this is the funniest compilation I have seen in YEARS
The fact that arin brought up the sandwiches argument a second time months later maybe longer is just hilarious.
Everytime I hear this Nevada argument a part of me dies a little.
Also the Nevada thing was ridiculous. I live in Colorado and only transplants(people who’ve moved here) pronounce it Colo rA DOE or Colo Rah Doe. It’s one word, continuous.. Colorado, phonetically: Call luh rah doe. All mushed together.
In the bigger, broader scope of things. I personally have very few hills I stand or die on, 😂 I just let things be.
My opinion that literally no one asked for:
The colloquial definition of a sandwich is a food item that consists of two units of bread with assorted fillings between them, yes? The other day, I got an ad in the email about the return of the Double Down at KFC. For those who are unaware, the Double Down is an abomination that consists of two breaded fried chicken patties with cheese, bacon, and sauce in between. That is literally it. (No bread at all.) The full name of the menu item? "The KFC Double Down Sandwich".
Maybe we shouldn't be getting linguistic or categorization lessons from corporations that care more about how something is marketed to the masses than it being an accurate description of the item in question.
It's fried chicken. You saying breading isn't bread? You saying a sub isn't a sandwich? It's one unit of bread cut open.
Since sandwich can be used as a verb to put something between two of anything (doesn’t have to be bread) I posit that a sandwich does not have to contain bread
Alternate Title idea: Game Grumps Being Game Grumps. 😂
I'm gonna start pronouncing Nevada how Canada is pronounced
to be fair Canada come from the word Kanata which is literally pronounced like that which is the indigenous word for village (learned that on a history commercial) also I'm canadian :P
06:38 I so desperately wish Dan had responded “well in point of fact it is…in three days”
pls retitle to "ARIN CHUCKING TANTRUMS AND DAN BEING CONCERNED | Game Grumps Compilation [NOT CLICKBAIT]"
Arin getting so heated about Nevada meanwhile we have Arkansas getting away with murder.
4:14 is such a sibling thing to say
Idk if they argue with each other so much as it is Arin arguing at Dan :P
missed opportunity to add the video game boy clip from the stick fight game
Arin getting so heated about the Ninja Turtles that he forgets to play Bloodborne is so fucking good
Arin is 100% correct about the plunger lol
That song at the end was a blast to the past
10:09 iconic
A burger is a sandwich and anyone who says otherwise can catch these fucking hands
The nevada thing is literally just arin trying to make people say the name of an area in the original language. And if that's the case, I guess he doesn't say any other city in any other country in English either, then? How do you pronounce "stockholm" then, sir? Because there is a Swedish way of saying it.
a hot dog is not a sandwich purely because of the bun. if the bun was two separate pieces, then it's a sandwich.
“What other language has the “a” sound??” Al pastor >_>
Arin is right about the original pronunciation of Nevada but words change pronunciation with time...by his logic, Los Angeles would be pronounced Lös Anhëlës, New Mexico would be Nuevo Mehico, Texas would be Tehas, etc.
Agree except for New Mexico. That's not changing pronunciation, that's changing languages.
@@horseluver4ever623 good point 🤔
I agree with arin, a hamburger is a sandwich
What game is that at 3:12 they are playing. I mean I know sonic but what sonic series? I’m curious.
Sonic generations, looks like. Hope you figured it out
@@charliecox8867 still have not clue but I’m gonna start rewatching some series and the sonic saga is on that list (minus frontiers because I still remember that play)
You forgot the one where they're arguing about Sayaka Maizono is not Italian
Arin is right though. Burgers are a type of sandwich
But who's saying it isn't? He's arguing with ghosts.
"You are in Ioway"
I always thought it was pronounced iowah?
"It is."
But he just said-
"We pronounce it that way but we don't like it when other people say it"
I never thought about the fact that when Arin talks about NevAda pronunciation and says what language has the “ahh” sound, his name LITERALLY STARTS WITH THAT SOUND!! Try it, NevAda, Arin, 😂😂😂
He said besides English though 😭
coming back to Arin's argument about hanburgers being sandwiches, Im of the mindset that hotdogs should be categorized as "tacos" cause they have a "shell" on 3 sides
I don't think this is the place to air that and I apologize but I had to get it out there
A burger is literally a sandwich. It just is what it is.
Wait what's that sonic game with Silver towards the beginning?
Sonic Generations
You forgot Arin arguing over why Play-Doh is supposedly edible.
This just makes me more convinced that Arin is a child locked in the body of a grown man, with no way of escaping. He comes up with arguments like the color white, sandwiches, Nevada, and now this.
You made my day. ❤
@@fandomwriter8789 It's Dan's response that makes it, really. "Okay, I think we've gotten to the bottom of your digestive problems..."
"Listen to one of Ninja Brian's bougie linguistics podcasts"
Anyone know what those podcasts are?
I think the main one is Lexicon Valley. I listened for a very long time. It's a great podcast for getting into linguistics!
I have to assume one of them is Lexicon Valley, possibly the Allusionist.
Lingthusiasm and Talk the Talk are also good.
"...the most logical explanation is Ne-vah-dah"
Yeah, well the most logical spelling of Pittsburgh was actually "Pittsburg" but we decided that looked dumb so we put the H back, Arin. Not everything has to make sense phonetically, and holding English up above all languages to constantly follow even its own rules for pronunciation is a fool's errand
Yeah but when there's a direct comparison that the state is literally named after, it's stupid to not pronounce it the same.
Pittsburgh is pronounced "Pitt's borough".
It’s a bit, I think everyone needs to relax a little lol
You know you're fucked if someone says something along the lines of "What constitutes an [X]?"
good comp nice upload
Ok but like a burger is a type of sandwich we just dont refer to it as a sandwich because its a specific kind. Thats like saying shears arent scissors they ARE scissors just meant for sheep and stuff
3:45
no it's not. it's true that the are other times that define a sandwich before just "does it have the word sandwich in the name," but hot dogs do not follow all of those rules and therefore do not classify as sandwiches. they're shitty sausages.
the main defining feature of a sandwich is the reliance on it being encased in some sort of bread based outer part. of course there are variations, like open face or hinge cut sandwiches which only use single pieces of bread, so it's not necessarily a requirement that it has "exactly two pieces of bread, one on top one on bottom," or wrap/pita/flatbread sandwiches, which use different bread-based wrappings.
however, the important distinction between a sandwich and a non sandwich food item that you can put in a bun is thus: if you remove said food item from the bread, and it continues to be identified as that same food item, it's not a sandwich.
for example: if you take the bread off of a hamburger, it's no longer a sandwich. now it's just a slab of ground beef. if you remove the bread from a Philly cheese steak, now it's just a bunch of shaved steak and cheese. if you remove the tortilla from a veggie wrap, it's no longer a sandwich, now it's a salad.
but if you remove the bread from a hot dog, IT'S STILL A HOT DOG.
therefore the hot dog is its own independent type of food item that you can have with a bun as an accessory and not a sandwich.
A hot dog is a type of taco.
SMEEF, IT IS I!
TBH i dont fully understand arin point with the white Isnt it common for people to say "oh thats bright" to highly saturated/ neon colours? maybe its an artist thing idk
i feel like the question was doomed from the start, since it can allow different interpretations to mess things up. _technically_ white can certainly be considered a bright color, but that’s probably not what a lot of people would see it as in the moment. to make a long story short- the boys are silly
In the technical sense, white and black are shades, not colors. Arin should know this since he's an artist.
@@Slvt4Bread now i feel especially silly, because i could’ve sworn white was a shade, but double checked before posting and saw some ppl think of it as a color? i’m with you though, i’ve always thought white and black were shades (which i should’ve known as an art student, but i let doubt get to me lmao)
Real talk: has anyone here actually tried Brian's "bougie linguistics podcast" ?
Or did Dan refer to one that Brian listens to?
Brian does not have a podcast, and I think Dan said “one of” his podcasts like they’re ones he’s a fan of. If you google it it looks like there are a ton of good ones
Ne-vá-ra
Ne-vah-da
burgers are indeed sandwhiches. hotdogs are not
Hot dogs are NOT sandwiches, though. They're tacos.
and pizzas are just open faced sandwiches.
Tacos are also sandwiches
@@DemonFireRain why do they call it a pizza pie? when it doesn't look like a pie? it doesn't even use pie crust
@@flapjackpancake5486 pies are just calzones
@@DemonFireRain but the dough used in a calzone is different than the the one used in pies
My bf is exactly like this which means Arin must be an ENTP
A hotdog is not a Sandwich. A sandwich is toppings Sandwiched in-between two pieces of "bread". A hotdog is surrounded on 3 sides by 1 bun, thus is not a sandwich.
That means it is a snuggled up sandwich... extra cozy for extra fillings 🥴
Listen, Arin is right on the Nevada thing because my first language is spanish and the way he pronounces it makes much more sense cos it's a Spanish fucking word!
Okay but who the hell thinks Raphael is the leader of the Ninja Turtles?
Love Arins NevAAda, NevAhda debate. Also just because your from a place doesn't mean you say it correctly, St. Louis, is properly said St. Lewey, but people who live there and have all their lives call it St. Lewis. And they're wrong.
Food definitions are a function of the context in which you're talking about them. For instance By law in most countries, Burgers have to be labelled a sandwich because that's how they're taxed and marketed and what health standards need to apply. Culturally, they're not typically sandwiches, because you don't go for burger sandwiches, you go for burgers. Historically, burger can refer to just the type of meat, which holds an entirely different function. And if you're talking about the etymology or linguistics of it, you have to go by what the most popular consensus of the term burger might be.
There's no point just saying "A burger is a sandwich" because that adds no significant information whatsoever.
The point is to make me laugh and he succeeded
Okay but a burger is definitely a sandwich. Doesn't matter if you don't call it a burger sandwich.
I frequently disagree with Arin about vocabulary stuff, but he's objectively correct about Nevada. The problem is that it's colloquially mispronounced.