why your typos are not your fault

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  • Опубликовано: 1 июн 2024
  • Get 10% your next Hostinger website using code ANSWER: hostinger.com/answerinprogress
    You probably forget if "embarrassing" has one R or two, and have come to rely on autocorrect and spellcheck a little too much over the years. Why is spelling such a struggle and what sets Scripps National Spelling Bee winners apart from us typo-laden normies? In this video, Sabrina jumps into the history and linguistics that makes the English language so hard to spell, trains for a spelling bee, and challenges the smartest people she knows to a spell off!
    PLAY THE GAME
    spellcheck.xyz
    SUPPORT US ON PATREON
    / answerinprogress
    SUBSCRIBE TO OUR MONTHLY NEWSLETTER
    www.answerinprogress.com/news...
    CHECK OUT PHIL'S CHANNEL
    / philedwardsinc
    FIX MY CODE ON GITHUB
    github.com/sabrina-aip
    SOCIAL MEDIA
    Sabrina
    Twitter: / nerdyandquirky
    Instagram: / nerdyandquirky
    Melissa
    Twitter: / mehlizfern
    Instagram: / mehlizfern
    Taha
    Twitter: / khanstopme
    Instagram: / khanstopme
    CREDITS
    Produced by Sabrina Cruz
    Research Assistance by Rosemary Webb
    Video Editing by Joe Trickey
    Motion Design by Sabrina Cruz
    Sound Design by Joe Trickey
    Special Thanks to
    Phil Edwards
    Hank Green
    Jade C
    Tom Lum
    Jabrils
    Steph Castillo
    Estefannie
    Imperial
    Glarses
    Joss Fong
    Adam Cole
    Andy Burgess
    Taha Khan
    Melissa Fernandes
    MUSIC
    Epidemic Sound. Get started today using our affiliate link. share.epidemicsound.com/answer...
    RECOMMENDED READING
    Hartman, T. (2022, June 2). The Spelling Bee highlights why it’s so hard to spell in English. Reuters. www.reuters.com/graphics/USA-...
    Wild, H. C. (1868). A Short History of English: With a Bibliography and Lists F Texts.
    Remer, S. (2018). Words of Wisdom: Keys to success in the scripps national spelling bee (fifth edition)
    TIMESTAMPS
    00:00 an embarasing confession
    00:35 is this a hbomberguy-able offense
    01:15 youtuber mines content from mundane occurance
    01:56 the american dream, A-M-E-R-I-C-A-N
    02:48 why English is so hard to spell
    03:46 a very specific encounter with my mortality
    04:24 IT WAS LAST UPDATED THIS YEAR
    04:40 responsible business ownership (derogatory)
    05:24 how to make a website (that kind of works)
    07:51 i can memorize pi but not coccygeal
    08:16 how spelling bees choose their words
    09:00 embracing mediocrity (and it kinda works)
    09:34 words with friends (not trademarked)
    13:36 the problem(s) with harmattan
    14:24 asking experts
    14:34 being ignored by experts
    14:39 sabrina is just like me, fr
    14:42 size isn't everything
    14:57 sabrina learns something (not how to spell tho)
    15:11 enemies to lovers arc
    16:00 how spelling bee champions train
    16:35 how English got so hard to spell
    20:30 sabrina makes a metaphor
    21:14 this metaphor cost over 200 dollars
    22:45 the procrastination finally has consequences
    23:00 the answer in progress spelling bee finals
    25:24 sabrina graciously accepts the L
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Welcome to the joke under the fold!
    Language is a surprisingly competitive and controversial beast.
    Actually, I almost got in a fight with a linguist. Luckily, he was all talk.
    Leave a comment with the word TALK to let me know you were here ;-)

Комментарии • 2,3 тыс.

  • @answerinprogress
    @answerinprogress  4 месяца назад +1286

    This video was a little embarrassing (double R double S) to make but I hope you liked it! Also, be sure to check out Phil's channel if you're interested in history and fascinating niche stories: youtube.com/@philedwardsinc

    • @literally-nobody242
      @literally-nobody242 4 месяца назад +14

      tanks allot

    • @OnTheNerdySide
      @OnTheNerdySide 4 месяца назад +9

      Phil is great!! Always one of my favorites at Vox and amazing now he's gone solo. Glad to see him here!!

    • @alisonbiles5981
      @alisonbiles5981 4 месяца назад +3

      First off, I love love love all your videos. So funny and informative. Second, I have a silly completely unrelated question, maybe a waste of your time. Where did you find the orange sweatshirt you wore in the video? Thanks!

    • @dougjohnson7063
      @dougjohnson7063 4 месяца назад +3

      Could you drop a link to all the RUclipsrs. Some of them I know, but having to individually search each from the name you gave is a bit much, but I am interested in seeing more content from each so want to check their pages.

    • @Star-du2od
      @Star-du2od 4 месяца назад +2

      I gave up trying to study spelling despite a looming SAT. THANK YOU SO MUCHHHHHHH!!!! mwah

  • @Glarses
    @Glarses 4 месяца назад +3698

    i can confirm I was told to spell Transmissibility incorrectly for the video, I would never misspell such an easee word

  • @cinderheart2720
    @cinderheart2720 4 месяца назад +5662

    RUclips really is about monetizing your therapy progress, ain't it?

    • @Happenpupe
      @Happenpupe 4 месяца назад +122

      I gutes it’s a win for everyone

    • @meditalisoo7
      @meditalisoo7 4 месяца назад +267

      Therapy in Progress

    • @TheFiteShow
      @TheFiteShow 4 месяца назад +62

      you're going through it, may as well get some dough for it

    • @IamaDesmond
      @IamaDesmond 4 месяца назад +21

      Therapy in progress

    • @kiwee4577
      @kiwee4577 4 месяца назад +18

      @@meditalisoo7 now that would be an interesting youtube channel, in itself

  • @Bedizenin
    @Bedizenin 3 месяца назад +556

    The “OH!” on the Japanese origin was so real. All the vowels are a lot more closed and easier to predict the spelling.

    • @theAkornTree
      @theAkornTree Месяц назад +6

      I had the exact same reaction when I had that word! (I paused the video to check out the website)

    • @DasOrange
      @DasOrange Месяц назад +12

      As a native German who learned English and French in school and is currently self teaching Japanese, German and Japanese are direct, French is hard to spell but easy to pronounce and English is a mess.

  • @MattAndImprov
    @MattAndImprov 4 месяца назад +729

    Pirate Butt
    That's how you remember how to spell embarrass
    ARR ... ASS

    • @Scratchydoesmusic
      @Scratchydoesmusic 3 месяца назад +15

      Yarr

    • @pinkajou656
      @pinkajou656 3 месяца назад +35

      that will genuinely help me

    • @Blackener
      @Blackener 3 месяца назад +69

      Once my friend told me that "Assassination" starts with two butts, I never look at that word the same way again 😂

    • @zephyrias
      @zephyrias 3 месяца назад +2

      Yaarrr harrr thats a good one

    • @zephyrias
      @zephyrias 3 месяца назад +12

      @@Blackenerthats how I remembered it back in the day.
      Asss asss in’s creed. got it

  • @xpengunx
    @xpengunx 4 месяца назад +1189

    The irony of pterodactyl being spelt wrong in the subtitle took me out 😂💀

    • @INNERLMNT
      @INNERLMNT 4 месяца назад +115

      The closed captions having the correct spelling is even funnier

    • @dukeofburgerz5225
      @dukeofburgerz5225 4 месяца назад +10

      It's so good 😆 I knew someone else had to have pointed it out

    • @DeltaEntropy
      @DeltaEntropy 4 месяца назад +8

      It gaslit me so bad…

    • @progCan
      @progCan 3 месяца назад +1

      IT WAS SPELT WRONG LOLOLOLOLOLMAO

    • @DoofenSpyroDragon16
      @DoofenSpyroDragon16 3 месяца назад +2

      It was?? Gosh, I didn’t even notice 😂

  • @JoseDanielFSX
    @JoseDanielFSX 4 месяца назад +2255

    As a native spanish speaker I always found spelling competitions very silly when they appeared in movies from the US. I always wondered why was spelling such a big deal in the US while in Spain is a skill that almost everyone above 8 years old should master. This video made me understand what the big deal is, I remembered from the time I started learning english that writing in english is way harder than it is in spanish because in english you have A LOT of different vowel sounds while in spanish every letter is always pronounced the same way and we only have 5 vowel sounds: a,e,i,o,u, that's it!

    • @higherquality
      @higherquality 4 месяца назад +88

      I really find Spanish way easier than English or god forbid Dutch

    • @shaiky1681
      @shaiky1681 4 месяца назад +146

      "Hard" Spanish words: "Paraguay, ovovivíparo, pterodáctilo..."
      Hard english words: "queue, height, length, through, thought, though, pterodactyl..."

    • @user9267
      @user9267 4 месяца назад +93

      I'm a native English speaker and I struggle more with spelling words in English than in Spanish

    • @user9267
      @user9267 4 месяца назад +29

      ​@@shaiky1681
      Eye doo naught get it

    • @dishevelleddev
      @dishevelleddev 4 месяца назад +45

      Not only that, but we have a lot of words whose pronunciation has changed but their spelling has not. Knight (now said like "NITE" or in Spanish it would probably be spelled NAIT) used to be pronounced with all of the letters. (The gh made a sound a bit like a cat's hiss). Not to mention all the different languages that modern English is built from with different rules for words from those languages. And that's not even considering English grammar.

  • @spencerthomas4087
    @spencerthomas4087 3 месяца назад +259

    When she said, "oh and word origin but I assume people only ask for that when they're stalling for time", I was hoping that would come full circle. Was not disappointed

  • @CatalogK9
    @CatalogK9 4 месяца назад +76

    In fairness, like half those final words were technically still in other languages, we just added them to our lexicon because we were too lazy to translate them and they were too specific to their cultures of origin. But yeah, etymology tells you what language's spelling rules to use, which is super useful for the majority of English words, in addition to helping to jog your memory as to which word they mean.

    • @jasonreed7522
      @jasonreed7522 3 месяца назад +6

      English has a tendency to just copy-paste words from other languages so the spelling stays the same, maybe with a slight drift. But the pronunciation is allowed to corrupt from its original language into something easier to say for native English speakers, causing all sorts of pain when trying to "sound out words". (Which is possible the least helpful advice all kindergartners hear when trying to spell things, because the language doesn't support doing it.)
      This can be seen as a feature since it makes it super easy to steal "loan words" for concepts that we don't have words for or that don't translate well.

  • @LinusBoman
    @LinusBoman 4 месяца назад +380

    English spelling: cough, rough, though, through.
    Spelling bees: it's not a bug, it's a feature.

    • @metalxhead
      @metalxhead 4 месяца назад +3

      Ha, at first I was surprised to see you here, and then I totally wasn't! That is a very concise list that hurts my brain. I like it.

    • @thork6974
      @thork6974 3 месяца назад +8

      "The tough coughs as he ploughs the dough."

    • @geebs7275
      @geebs7275 3 месяца назад +5

      @@thork6974that should've rhyme but it doesn't and I'm actually tweaking

    • @lemonadeslices
      @lemonadeslices 3 месяца назад +1

      adding thorough to this list

    • @laurencefraser
      @laurencefraser 3 месяца назад +4

      -ough is one of the few instances of something that is 100% a bug as a result of left over legacy fragments that really should have been depreciated and replaced with something functional long ago.
      Most of the other supposed 'bugs' are less 'bad code' and more 'bad documentation'. Though arguably a system that requires over 60 sequential rules in order to be consistent enough for a computer, never mind a human, has Issues, even if they're not 'bugs'. Though introducing an actual Stress Mark would cut that number down a Lot.

  • @grummdoesstuff2983
    @grummdoesstuff2983 4 месяца назад +1061

    Remember, it’s I before e except after c, unless you weird foreign neighbor Keith receives eight beige weights.

    • @jedisalsohere
      @jedisalsohere 4 месяца назад +69

      "receive" is spelt right by the rule though

    • @KitsuneMiko383
      @KitsuneMiko383 4 месяца назад +87

      you forgot the other half: "Or when sounding like A, as in neighbor or weigh." That's important, ya know?

    • @risamaeve
      @risamaeve 4 месяца назад +57

      @@KitsuneMiko383 with these exceptions: weird height, foreign leisure, neither seize nor forfeit either

    • @awkweirdabby8352
      @awkweirdabby8352 4 месяца назад +8

      *your

    • @AnonHooman
      @AnonHooman 4 месяца назад +9

      Efficiency

  • @themaskedinc.786
    @themaskedinc.786 3 месяца назад +109

    Ngl the Hostinger ad was probally the most convincing ad I have ever seen on youtube

  • @DanielDinhCreative
    @DanielDinhCreative 4 месяца назад +35

    This also shows why lots of foreign speakers struggle so much with English. It's such a mashup of different origins and etymologies which often make no sense unless you've been exposed to it.
    Even between english-speaking countries, there's disagreement around spelling and pronunciation...

  • @Retiarius2
    @Retiarius2 4 месяца назад +987

    Can I just mention my sheer respect for the sponsorship segment here? Integrating it seamlessly into part of the video was a genius move. I can't skip past it and I'm not even mad.

    • @maike__-
      @maike__- 4 месяца назад +51

      Right? I was about to skip it but then it was relevant so I stayed. Good job Sabrina!

    • @Xanthelei
      @Xanthelei 4 месяца назад +45

      It really is the best way to add in ads for things. It took me a few beats to even realize it WAS an ad!

    • @ktaragorn
      @ktaragorn 4 месяца назад +10

      Same, best sponsorship segment ive seen i think.

    • @adrenalinerider3030
      @adrenalinerider3030 4 месяца назад +4

      RIGHT? I got to the end of the segment and said 'That was an ad??"

    • @geeksdo1tbetter
      @geeksdo1tbetter 3 месяца назад

      I didn't even realize it was still the ad, halfway thru!

  • @confusedwhale
    @confusedwhale 4 месяца назад +707

    The reason for "word origin" in a spelling bee helps the contestant figure out how a word is spelled if they have never heard/seen it before. It's so they can figure out how the word would be spelled based on the original language's spelling--for lack of a better word--idiosyncrasies.
    Edit:
    I appreciate that you acknowledged Phil at the end with how important etymology is with spelling in English.

    • @meiliyinhua7486
      @meiliyinhua7486 4 месяца назад +24

      ye I heard the "ramping for time" comment and thought "No. Nonono. Nonononono"

    • @I.____.....__...__
      @I.____.....__...__ 4 месяца назад +3

      @@meiliyinhua7486 The irony of her making up a word and/or redefining it in a video about spelling. 😒 No, there is no world in which "ramping" is a verb that means what she implied.

    • @meiliyinhua7486
      @meiliyinhua7486 4 месяца назад +7

      @I.____.....__...__ that one I'm more willing to forgive, cuz I'm imagining there's a colloquial etymology there from "vamping for time." Which is when a play's orchestra will repeat a small section, or "vamp," to handle any variable-time delay that actors might have with minimal improvisation and minimal chance of the audience noticing.
      Naturally those unfamiliar with the underlying might hear the phrase "vamping for time," and mistakenly "correct" vamping to the more familiar word "ramping"

    • @elerielouie3160
      @elerielouie3160 4 месяца назад +17

      ​@@I.____.....__...__I believe what she actually said was "Vamping for time" which IS a real expression. It seems to come from a music term, specifically as a type of improvisation.

    • @zak3744
      @zak3744 4 месяца назад +6

      @@meiliyinhua7486 Yeah, she said "vamping", not "ramping". I just went back and listened again to check my brain didn't auto-correct when I first heard it. She definitely said "vamping"!

  • @toomanyopinions8353
    @toomanyopinions8353 3 месяца назад +24

    The most important and impactful single lesson I ever learned in school was in 6th grade when my teacher spent a few weeks teaching my class Latin and Greek roots, prefixes, and suffixes that are used in english. It has been immensely helpful.

    • @katie18976
      @katie18976 2 месяца назад

      I would've loved to be in that class 🤩

  • @ajuma55
    @ajuma55 3 месяца назад +28

    For years, I ended letters with "Yours" because I could never remember how to spell Tru(e)ly or Sincer(e)ly. I still can't spell them. Thank goodness for spell-check!!!

    • @pian816
      @pian816 3 месяца назад +5

      Your parentheses confused the heck out of me since truly doesn't have an E, but sincerely does. 😭 Cheers!

    • @ajuma55
      @ajuma55 3 месяца назад +8

      That's exactly my point. I never knew if either one of those words had an "e" or not. I had the same experience with a spelling test as she did. For me, the word was "been". Where I live, we pronounce it like the name Ben. "B-E-N" just didn't look right, or sound right in my head. Neither did "B-E-E-N". "B-E-A-N" was definitely wrong. I ended up with a hole in my paper from erasing so much. Vowels have always been a problem for me.

    • @PanduPoluan
      @PanduPoluan 2 месяца назад +3

      I just end my emails with "Rgds,"
      It's now so much a signature of mine that if it's not there people start to become suspicious 😅

  • @AtlasMatheu
    @AtlasMatheu 4 месяца назад +461

    So, as a BIG etymology nerd. When you said word origins are just time filler I almost exploded in the comments. Glad I waited the whole video! Great job!

    • @stefflcus
      @stefflcus 4 месяца назад +28

      Ssssame! The foreshadowing was top notch.

    • @AD_AP_T
      @AD_AP_T 4 месяца назад +18

      Agreed! I was waiting for the revelation. I couldn't do times tables if my life depended on it as a kid, but was exceptional at spelling... and I'm pretty sure it's because a word's spelling tells a story that makes sense to me.

    • @hallieharvey4073
      @hallieharvey4073 3 месяца назад +2

      For real I immediately went but that how people learn to win spelling bees you learnt etymology so you can spell nearly anything 😂

    • @BlueMentos
      @BlueMentos 3 месяца назад +1

      woah there buddy, there are children in these comments

  • @AngelVids7
    @AngelVids7 4 месяца назад +565

    Word origins are literally the most important part of learning English spellings as most of our words are rooted in words from other languages

    • @awkweirdabby8352
      @awkweirdabby8352 4 месяца назад +28

      Yes!! I was looking for a comment about this. Word origin is so important for spelling!

    • @chesspiece4257
      @chesspiece4257 4 месяца назад +21

      word origin is even better for pronunciation (french and greek are the hardest to me)

    • @CoreenMontagna
      @CoreenMontagna 4 месяца назад +14

      Right, like ffff is probably PH if Greek, and F if Latin

    • @Jiglias
      @Jiglias 4 месяца назад +11

      yeah with country of origin and definition you can basically recreate most words

    • @AhrenAKADan
      @AhrenAKADan 4 месяца назад +18

      ​@@Jiglias Exactly. They ask word origin when they don't know for sure so they can use the right spellset for the phonemes. Like if it's a word that starts with the sound for "new" and they say it's Greek there is a real chance it's gonna be a pn to start

  • @Yellowsam4145
    @Yellowsam4145 Месяц назад +7

    "The word just... LOOKS wrong..." is me every time I see a word that I can't spell but is just... wrongly spelt

  • @ponyov.8308
    @ponyov.8308 4 месяца назад +18

    As a new English teacher, I was so proud of the second half of this video. Fresh out of university, I was wondering if I would ever reuse the knowledge of the History of English class. Thank you so much. I am for sure going to recommend this video, hahaha

  • @PhilEdwardsInc
    @PhilEdwardsInc 4 месяца назад +466

    I'm genuinely anxious because I haven't played yet today.

    • @matt45540
      @matt45540 4 месяца назад +30

      I was pulling for you Phil!

    • @natalkadullek5809
      @natalkadullek5809 4 месяца назад

      @@matt45540 I also did!

    • @mrharvest
      @mrharvest 4 месяца назад +10

      You did amazing, good job!

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 4 месяца назад +11

      Hey, you are the reigning champion! And you always will be, because there's probably not going to be another championship!

    • @chilaou
      @chilaou 4 месяца назад +6

      Hey, someone had to occupy Sabrina's mad dive and obsession with this project. I'm sure Melissa and Taha appreciate keeping her busy!
      And congrats!

  • @SimplyDomRBLX
    @SimplyDomRBLX 4 месяца назад +567

    Sabrina using spell check for every single word is legit me 😭

    • @rickk3658
      @rickk3658 4 месяца назад +7

      My first Word Processor, SpeedScript, on the Commodore 64 worked the same way. The program's spell checker was keyed in by hand, but the dictionary was empty. Every word in my first document was misspelled until I added the words to the dictionary. Thankfully I didn't have to retype them to add.

  • @ColinandSamir
    @ColinandSamir 4 месяца назад +119

    This is just so good.

    • @ZevMeth_originaljewishmusic
      @ZevMeth_originaljewishmusic 4 месяца назад +4

      Agreed! And that ad integration was the most seamless I've ever seen! Mr. Beast needs to take some notes!

    • @elijahparnell
      @elijahparnell 3 месяца назад +1

      @@ZevMeth_originaljewishmusic the ad was great. i hate when ads are so obnoxious you skip them, when theyre interesting and actually revolve around the video, theyre amazing!

  • @mukundsai1806
    @mukundsai1806 4 месяца назад +5

    20:16 "Rizz" for 2023 is still better than the "😂" emoji as Oxford Word of the Year for 2015 xD

  • @iplayminecraft2248
    @iplayminecraft2248 4 месяца назад +152

    “Nobody is rooting for me, I’m the villain in the scenario” is such a sentence

    • @sterndrache...ok.
      @sterndrache...ok. 3 месяца назад +5

      I love how you didn't use an adjective, you just said it's a sentence which yes, it obviously is but also you are definitely correct, it is such a sentence.

    • @kqawiyy
      @kqawiyy 3 месяца назад +1

      Eren Yaeger in a nutshell

    • @PlayingWithWilson
      @PlayingWithWilson 3 месяца назад

      You bots are getting very close to actually convincing someone that you're a human.

    • @iplayminecraft2248
      @iplayminecraft2248 3 месяца назад +1

      @@PlayingWithWilson ok buddy

    • @PlayingWithWilson
      @PlayingWithWilson 3 месяца назад

      Nobody but bots say buddy anymore, you need an update.

  • @Aurus46
    @Aurus46 4 месяца назад +105

    It's really interesting that as a native french speaker I have a harder time with medium difficulty than hard, because most of the "hard" words have obvious Latin roots or are straight up French loanwords.

    • @themenacingpenguin.7152
      @themenacingpenguin.7152 Месяц назад

      French loanwords have 4 extra vowels on average that just sit there with a thumb up their ass, that's why I hate French loanwords with a passion and want to melt the Eiffel tower into diet silverware for mukbang youtubers. Latin and Greek words are kinda easy.

  • @kqawiyy
    @kqawiyy 3 месяца назад +3

    I never actually knew what purpose asking for the origin of the word served. This video made me realize that knowing the language & place it comes from would help narrow down how the word is spelled based on how that specific culture would spell it

  • @locolord
    @locolord 4 месяца назад +7

    This is not only a great video, but it is also some of the best editing I've ever seen. The way the video plays out like a story being told is also amazing. This needs more views!

  • @avi12
    @avi12 4 месяца назад +867

    Therapist: "Mustache-less Waluigi doesn't exist. It can't hurt you."
    Sabrina: 18:33

    • @kainaris
      @kainaris 4 месяца назад +8

      Unnatural.

    • @liliwheeler2204
      @liliwheeler2204 4 месяца назад +6

      I'm definitely getting the impression that Sabrina has thought about this a lot for some reason.....

    • @SayAhh
      @SayAhh 4 месяца назад +1

      I had to look up mustache vs moustache once.

    • @ultimate6295
      @ultimate6295 3 месяца назад +2

      I‘m at minute 1 of watching this video and simultaneously scrolling down comments and I have no idea how Waluigi can fit into all of this, I can‘t wait to see 😂

  • @londongael414
    @londongael414 4 месяца назад +379

    The best way to learn to spell is to READ A LOT, and read widely. That way, when a word is spelled wrong, it looks wrong, because you've seen it hundreds, or thousands, of times. OK, some of these spelling bee words don't come up that often - but that's why they pick them. If you want to win spelling bees, study those words. If you want to spell well for real life, read a lot. Appreciating the history and etymology is also great, and I'm so glad Sabrina included that!

    • @stevieinselby
      @stevieinselby 4 месяца назад +60

      The funny thing then though is when people know a word but don't know how to _pronounce_ it, because they've only ever seen it written down. Not that I would mock or denigrate anyone for that, it shows that they have a thirst for reading and for language, which is admirable, but it can be a bit incongruous at times.

    • @londongael414
      @londongael414 4 месяца назад +29

      @@stevieinselby A friend of mine had a brilliant way of dealing with that slightly awkward moment. If corrected, he'd say "That's what I said", the corrector would say "Oh, sorry" and the conversation would continue with nobody feeling embarrassed (two Rs, two Ss).

    • @pinkfloweredsnake
      @pinkfloweredsnake 4 месяца назад +14

      Idk I somehow managed to be a veracious reader and terrible speller. It wasn't until after college when it clicked that Saturday comes from the word Saturn, and I stopped spelling it with an e. I think in general reading is so important for vocabulary. I love reading and it paid off in other ways. For most people it helps them spell, too. But, frustratingly for me, it's not a hard and fast rule.

    • @londongael414
      @londongael414 4 месяца назад +9

      @@pinkfloweredsnake Well, few rules are hard and fast :-) I am also a voracious ("devouring" -think of carniVORe) reader, and, though an excellent speller, there are still words that trip me up! Sounds like etymology would be more your route 😊 When all's said and done, it's more important to enjoy reading than to spell well.

    • @pinkfloweredsnake
      @pinkfloweredsnake 4 месяца назад +1

      @@londongael414 lol love that this typo made my point for me. But if it took me post college to get the weekdays right, I don't know that I have much faith in etymology either. I think most people take for granted how much they suck out of the air. If one person is thinking about how to spell voracious and the other Saturday, the second is going to have to be putting a whole lot more effort into something most consider, at least on the level of Saturday, basic. And if asked, I could have even said what the word is connected to: vor in my mind is attached to consume (there's even a kink!). I can usually guess what language a word comes from, too. Green grun German, verdant ver French, robot, interestingly, Russian, apotheosis (beautiful word, first came it in the sound and the Fury in 12 grade) obviously Latin. But the actual spelling rules that are supposed to be attached to this knowledge isn't there. Ostensibly I have the pieces but...dunno.
      And edit to add: yes of course spelling isn't everything. But it's a pretty frustrating gap to have! Sometimes frustrating in surprisingly damaging ways( ie people taking errors I'm genuinely blind to as carelessness since they can't imagine I don't know, or that I wouldn't catch something if i had just taken the time to glance over what i wrote..which i do, usually many times) But also in smaller ways like not wanting to be sidetracked by red squiggles when typing: P

  • @LeLuvicks
    @LeLuvicks 4 месяца назад +3

    I am obsessed with your powerpoint presentations segments and I was HYPED when you were setting up the projector. This is 100% how I plan my classes and work presentations (and honestly the correct way to use powerpoint ??) and I strive to make mine as great as yours

  • @bassmanjjm33
    @bassmanjjm33 4 месяца назад +4

    OMG I never bother commenting on RUclips, but this video was so good! As someone who as struggled with a self diagnosis of dyslexia and always been a slower reader, which I have been attributing to the dyslexia, I am seen in this video. I absolutely love reading and writing in my adult life, but have struggled explaining to folks the politics of it and the fact that it can be something to strive for, but that it should not be used as such a high standard to determine ones intelligence. Your video tells such a beautiful story of going from someone who just feels like spelling is hard and it sucks to someone who recognizes that it is hard and that is what makes it beautiful, making this not only a wonderful educational video but a really moving one. Excellent work!

  • @blackamaterasuflame
    @blackamaterasuflame 4 месяца назад +290

    "could have cheated, but forgot to" I feel Sabrina in my soul every video.

  • @blips97
    @blips97 4 месяца назад +91

    As a language nerd, when you initially said you were gonna exclude the etymologies from the game I went "NOOOOOOO"

    • @Nicozumba
      @Nicozumba 3 месяца назад +3

      In spanish words are spelled like they sound, I dont know how to explain it. Just that we think your spelling contests are dumb for us, since for us it would be like "Breathing Contests"
      And also I still dont understand why spelling is hard for you, english is not my native language but spelling wasnt a trouble for me.

    • @blips97
      @blips97 3 месяца назад

      Well, it's not hard for me, but I'm a language nerd so. I'm not a good example.@@Nicozumba

    • @Nicozumba
      @Nicozumba 3 месяца назад

      @@blips97 I meant the average english native I guess. About language im talking about my experience, im more of a maths nerd

    • @AD_AP_T
      @AD_AP_T 3 месяца назад +3

      @@Nicozumba It really doesn't need much explaining - most English background speakers are familiar with the way many other languages' spellings map tidily to pronunciations, and how English is unusual in this regard.
      In Spanish, words are spelled how they sound *in Spanish.* In English, words are spelled how they sound in Spanish, Italian, German, Gaelic, Greek, Flemish, Dutch, French, Urdu, Latin, Norwegian, Malaysian, Mayan, Portuguese, etc, etc... and sometimes the system even changes mid-word. Most of us have a basic level of awareness of this, even if not all of us know how to decode those spellings and read the history of the language in the very bones of our written words.

    • @gen9695
      @gen9695 3 месяца назад +2

      ​@Nicozumba On October 14th, 1066, William, duke of Normandy, and native French speaker, took full control of England. This led to an incredible amount of upheaval in early British culture and politics, leading to the entirety of the British nobility speaking almost exclusively French, and the rest of the population speaking Old English. Over the next few centuries, these 2 languages would then merge through a process known as hierarchical diffusion, leading to the creation of Early Modern English. To give an example: all of the English words for meats (beef, pork, poultry, etc.), whereas all the words for the relevant animals descend from Proto-Germanic. To add insult to injury, Old English isn't even meant to use the Latin alphabet, and most of our phonology doesn't actually correlate well with it at all. So, the language is at war with itself, possessing 2 major distinct phonologies, both fighting for custody over the sole alphabet, which was only designed for the French portion of the language.
      Meanwhile, Spanish is a direct descendant of Latin Vulgaris, and uses the Latin alphabet. It was not subjected to any such linguistic fusion, and as such, remains phonologically consistent.

  • @IONProd
    @IONProd 4 месяца назад +1

    Word origin gives huge clues on how it's spelled because of general rules from those languages. Like "eau" is a really common combination in french words, such as chateau or beautiful

  • @melissaprice2880
    @melissaprice2880 4 месяца назад +1

    I appreciate so much that you tackled this topic. My English speaking kids go to french school and while they are speaking French beautifully in just a few years, they are struggling with reading and writing in 2 languages where phonetics and spelling don't match very well. I've always sucked at spelling and confused french and English words regularly (choose/chose, beaucoup/because etc). So 1- addressing that it's a challenge for many people and 2- working on a solution is amazing! Thanks!

  • @robuxyyyyyyyyyy4708
    @robuxyyyyyyyyyy4708 4 месяца назад +330

    The beauty of english is that if enough people say something a certain way it just becomes how people pronounce it, which is why I'm pronouncing Arkansas as ar-kansas

    • @AmIAntiAntianti
      @AmIAntiAntianti 4 месяца назад +11

      Ha ha. I do that

    • @IsYitzach
      @IsYitzach 4 месяца назад +42

      Unfortunately, the pronunciation of Arkansas is fixed by law to be Ark-an-saw. You can thank the Senators representing the state in the US senate for that a long time ago. They want different pronunciations and the state legislature said, "F*** that, it's pronounced Ark-an-saw"

    • @robuxyyyyyyyyyy4708
      @robuxyyyyyyyyyy4708 4 месяца назад +36

      @@IsYitzach What are they going to do? Ban pronouncing it another way?

    • @aminelswefy1808
      @aminelswefy1808 4 месяца назад

      @@robuxyyyyyyyyyy4708The FBI is putting you under investigation for the mispronunciation of Arkansas. Your only hope is to hand yourself in for questioning and receive a more lenient sentence.

    • @know1care
      @know1care 4 месяца назад +12

      I did a short research on demonyms the other day. How would you call a person from Wisconsin? Similar to New Yorker or Floridian? Nope, it's Wisconsinite! And there is just no specific rule for local demonyms. Just however local people prefer to call themselves. Many cities simply don't have it.

  • @phoenixacxf
    @phoenixacxf 4 месяца назад +111

    These videos have taught me that Sabrina loves coding, Melissa loves food, and TAHA STILL NEEDS HIS COUCH

  • @pogchannel420
    @pogchannel420 3 месяца назад +1

    this was actually very fun to watch, it felt like i was too on this journey alongside fun and dumb parts of the video, i love it when a video has this quality of production and the fact that you always make a fun education point throughout the video, it makes it a lot more fun to enjoy learning

  • @Blueredlady
    @Blueredlady 2 месяца назад +1

    Ive been loving watching videos on the English Language and its history recently but i have to say this 4min summary is so great and informative 👌
    "English is a time capsule buried under those squiggly red lines"
    New subscriber here

  • @ceralith942
    @ceralith942 4 месяца назад +37

    "Spell Pterodactyl. "
    "... T."
    😂😂😂

  • @throstlewanion
    @throstlewanion 4 месяца назад +688

    Ok but can I say as a non-native English speaker wierd makes much more sense than weird

    • @pedrosaune
      @pedrosaune 4 месяца назад +63

      for me, "weerd" would be the perfect one

    • @Spicysaucysauce
      @Spicysaucysauce 4 месяца назад +61

      I know right? English is super wierd

    • @KokaKolaMusic
      @KokaKolaMusic 4 месяца назад +52

      ​@@pedrosaune funny story, it used to be spelled werd, wird, or wyrd.

    • @christianjalexander
      @christianjalexander 4 месяца назад +11

      I will agree with you as a native English speaker.

    • @foxpokemonforever4775
      @foxpokemonforever4775 4 месяца назад +33

      It completely breaks the i before e rule and yet wierd looks weird

  • @harshitaharshloomba7701
    @harshitaharshloomba7701 3 месяца назад

    I loved how the video took a completely different turn in the middle. Kudos, you just earned a subscriber!

  • @ma_yuvari2215
    @ma_yuvari2215 4 месяца назад +2

    Hey answer in progress! Taha, Mellisa and Sabrina, just wanted to let you know i really love your channel! Ive been looking forward for your videos and i find them intresting, funny and inspiring. Thanks! God bless you and i hope that you will continue to enjoy doing what you love.

  • @richbaird9407
    @richbaird9407 4 месяца назад +179

    It really hurts my heart that Mr. Beast can literally burn piles of money for the clicks, while this genuine insightful joy of a channel can’t afford a ticket to California. Great work and don’t worry, I can’t spell embarased either 😅

    • @mattcoxonline
      @mattcoxonline 4 месяца назад +9

      They did just drop over $300 on books + API calls though.

    • @roecocoa
      @roecocoa 4 месяца назад +1

      Sometimes it helps to make up a little story with an anagram. "After downing an entire bottle of MR BARE ASS GIN, he did something truly EMBARRASSING."
      Admittedly, some words lend themselves to this process more than others.

  • @manqobashongwe1301
    @manqobashongwe1301 4 месяца назад +69

    'English isn't whack, it's a record.' Heck of a way to look at it, Ms Cruz.👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾

  • @user-zp2xt4hs3n
    @user-zp2xt4hs3n 4 месяца назад +3

    17:48 until THE FRENCH

  • @abigailb2478
    @abigailb2478 4 месяца назад

    it's the first video I see from your channel and I love your personality. you're so bubbly and fun🥰
    now I just want to watch all of your videos

  • @Ashley-xu1lk
    @Ashley-xu1lk 4 месяца назад +37

    1) Answer in Progress should do an annual spelling bee, that would be amazing to watch!
    2) I love you Sabrina, but I love Phil a little more and was rooting for him. But would've been happy either way.
    3) As usual, you did amazing at learning something new and thank you for sharing that process! This is one of my favorite channels. You learn things that isn't ever covered in school. You'd think we'd learn the origin of English in English class, but nope haha

  • @scragar
    @scragar 4 месяца назад +40

    Word origins is IMO one of the biggest clues in how to spell.
    English is a mix of 3 major languages(Germanic/Old English, French, and Latin) with some Greek/Nordic influences. Each of those languages has it's own rules for spelling/pronounciation as well as having their own twists when they came into english(for example silent letters from pt or ps in Greek vs silent h from latin and silent e from Old French but not more Modern French).
    Learning those rules and how to apply them is a huge step towards figuring out words you might not already know. Yes it's a last resort(because like all rules to the English language there are lors of exceptions), but just based on word sounds and etymology you can generally get about 80-85% correct first try.

    • @jasonreed7522
      @jasonreed7522 3 месяца назад +1

      Also most science words use greek and latin as the roots, but use the germanic compound word structure for the modularity.
      This leads to an interesting bit of trivia where by common usage greek makes up 5% of the language, but by pure dictionary count greek origins account for around 20% of the language. (Most people just don't say words like photosynthesis or electrophoresis in their average conversations.)

  • @Jeejjj
    @Jeejjj 4 месяца назад +1

    New subscriber here, having studied English linguistics a lil I was worried when you disregarded etymology for your spelling website at the beginning but in the end you accounted for that.
    Solid video, great video. 9/10 would have loved to see some of the tips contained in those $100's worth of spelling books

  • @kayquimi9123
    @kayquimi9123 4 месяца назад +1

    Loved this episode and I'm glad it led you to appreciate English's crazy mishmash of languages more! And if it makes you feel better, I've always been great at spelling and did the local competitions growing up -- and those "is there a double letter?" words STILL get me ALL THE TIME 😅

  • @WrenStanchen
    @WrenStanchen 4 месяца назад +40

    I'm gonna show this to my students, and we shall have spell offs. Thank you for aiding me in my quest of convincing middle school boys that English is cool!

    • @AbiSaysThings
      @AbiSaysThings 4 месяца назад +4

      If you're actually going to use it as a teaching aid I would fact-check it beforehand. For instance a certain word in today's challenge is being pronounced like Roseanne, when it should actually be like rozz-in.

    • @Merrsharr
      @Merrsharr 3 месяца назад

      Can't expect a text-to-speech AI to get uncommon words right. Merriam-Webster's website has audio with pronunciation for most words (sometimes even more than one when multiple pronunciations are common).

  • @honeycream1396
    @honeycream1396 4 месяца назад +99

    The last time I cheated in school was also a spelling test. Didn't know if "ninety" was spelled with a d or without. Looked at the person next to me who wrote "ninety" and thought they were wrong.
    Ended up writing down "niney".

    • @I.____.....__...__
      @I.____.....__...__ 4 месяца назад

      Compromise makes the world go round. 🤷

    • @rukbat3
      @rukbat3 4 месяца назад +5

      The one and only time I cheated on a test in school was also a spelling test! The word was "robin." Similar to Sabrina, I felt so horrible about it that I never did it again. And what made is worse was that "Robin" is my Granddad's name!

    • @kcoyne6362
      @kcoyne6362 4 месяца назад

      The first test I cheated on was a first grade spelling test. Glad I'm not the only one!

    • @catelynh1020
      @catelynh1020 4 месяца назад +1

      I cheated on a test in high school. I'd been gone for a bit from an illness and came back to a test with a substitute teacher. The test was about memorizing the first however many elements on the periodic table. Route memorization was already not my strong suit, so i shifted my glasses and looked up through them at the giant periodic table of elements in the front of the classroom that had exactly 100% of the answers on it. When our regular teacher was back, he covered the giant poster for the following tests.
      Understandably.

    • @killerbee.13
      @killerbee.13 3 месяца назад

      @@rukbat3 I never cheated on a spelling test, but I was at least 20 years old when I realized that my grandpa's name was spelled "Wally" as in short for "Walter" because I'd literally never seen it written down and he didn't interact much with my immediate family for the last few years of his life so I hadn't really had much reason to talk about him since I was much younger.

  • @vitsofiasantos
    @vitsofiasantos Месяц назад

    I'm Brazilian and I found this RUclips channel because I was looking for interesting videos in English with subtitles precisely because I have A LOT of difficulty with the language in general (I joined the game you put in the description and managed to get all the words wrong 😅). But I'm trying to have more fun during this learning process, instead of putting too much pressure on myself. Thanks, Sabrina, for this video. 🧡✨🤧

  • @lelouchzxc_
    @lelouchzxc_ 3 месяца назад +1

    This is one of the best video i have ever -whatched- watched!
    The editing the emotion of the discovery is so well done! (english still sucks but now less)

  • @TuxLetsPlay
    @TuxLetsPlay 4 месяца назад +24

    Oh right. I forgot we added capital ß in 2017.
    We never had that because it was never used at the start of a word.
    Forced us to use "ss" instead when all-caps typing tho.

    • @Whiteythereaper
      @Whiteythereaper 2 месяца назад +5

      Sssniperwolf boutta make a new channel called ßsniperwolf in that case

    • @mirjam3553
      @mirjam3553 2 месяца назад +1

      I had to scroll way too far to see what German changed. Makes sense to have it just for completeness, but is it actually used anywhere? (My daily media intake is def not in German...)

    • @TuxLetsPlay
      @TuxLetsPlay 2 месяца назад +3

      @@mirjam3553 I think really just because on the Internet, all-caps is used quite often. Not only in more casual situations like comments, but also sometimes for stylistic reasons in titles and things like that.
      Especially with new web technologies when you can just add a line of code that says "make all this all-caps", that probably caused some problems with text that was written in the past.

    • @mirjam3553
      @mirjam3553 2 месяца назад +1

      @@TuxLetsPlay Thank you! I was briefly afraid they'd made new rules for where it's supposed to get used...

    • @Whiteythereaper
      @Whiteythereaper Месяц назад

      @@TuxLetsPlay also not just on the standard Internet, but with subtitles on media too. Some streaming services put all their subtitle tracks in all caps by default through sheer laziness, and it's especially egregious on physical media like Blu Rays, and on Live TV too

  • @mr.duck1248
    @mr.duck1248 4 месяца назад +15

    The spelling bee lady keeps making a vowel sound before the beginning of the word and I’m like “what did she say????”

  • @twertygo
    @twertygo 4 месяца назад +1

    This might be one of the funniest episodes ever! The I was legit laughing out loud when you called English whack and when you referred to runes as from "that Tom Scott video" (in part because I always think of that video when I encounter runes lol). But also the amount of effort that went into the shots! Must have taken ages to film this, you can really be proud of this one!

  • @juliette862
    @juliette862 2 месяца назад

    I'm studying English Studies, I'm not a native speaker of English and I clicked this just to see your reaction for discovering the history of this language. Totally worth it, best thing I've seen today 😂😂😂

  • @ricdavid
    @ricdavid 4 месяца назад +30

    I'm always impressed by the videography(?) of your videos. It could just be you sitting in front of a green screen like 90% of youtubers, but it's not, you put so much more effort into it with weird angles and lots of cuts and that's what I appreciates about ya. Also I think "embarrassing" (double R double S) is like the poster child for words we all screw up despite using it all the time.

    • @thork6974
      @thork6974 3 месяца назад

      That slide into frame on "Aaaaanyway" kills me.

  • @tofuachoo
    @tofuachoo Месяц назад

    This was such a relatable and a great video, I love it, and I love the qualieteeis used here.

  • @13REPF95
    @13REPF95 3 месяца назад

    I just discovered this channel a couple of days ago and it's being one of the best experiences in my life haha. When I grow up, I want to be like you haha
    Keep going!!🎉😁

  • @trenchcoatgoose
    @trenchcoatgoose 4 месяца назад +28

    given that i am an english student and big into the english change over time stuff the part of the video where sabrina fully flips her opinion on english was so funny. first time i've already known something in one of these videos lol

  • @nweoodropz
    @nweoodropz 4 месяца назад +75

    Sabrina is so me, the way that i feel that spell check is cheating is so relatable

  • @mdc_artwork141
    @mdc_artwork141 3 месяца назад

    I absolutely love the way u make and edit ur videos it’s so good

  • @JHaven-lg7lj
    @JHaven-lg7lj 3 месяца назад

    I’m forever grateful that my schools emphasized etymology, it helps me all the time. Not least because I could usually help my kids understand a word, and now I can help my grandkids too.
    I was just talking to one of them last night about why animals and the meat from the animals have different names.

  • @normalperson4sure
    @normalperson4sure 4 месяца назад +65

    "I don't think they make spelling bees for adults!" Guy Montgomery would beg to differ

    • @pppfan103
      @pppfan103 4 месяца назад +16

      to be fair, if flying out to california was too much for the budget, i imagine flying to new zealand probably wasn't either

  • @PeachNEPTR
    @PeachNEPTR 4 месяца назад +36

    One thing I’ve learned to appreciate over time is the way in which English is genuinely a world language. English doesn’t care where a word comes from, if the word is useful we use it. We often spell it the same or similarly to the language it comes from and so we have this massive hodgepodge of mixed up language. It constantly grows and changes. The grammar is very fluid and sometimes sentence structures can be wildly mixed up, and still comprehensible. It has so much room for dialect.
    I love how something like German is very strict, it’s precise. The way that things are spelled such that you always know exactly what it sounds like. But English allows you to say “exactly what you mean” even if that is in three different languages at the same time.

  • @lotusdumplings7066
    @lotusdumplings7066 4 месяца назад

    I played it and absolutely loved that you had word origins in the daily, it's incredibly helpful in English to know where a word is from

  • @Topcatyo.
    @Topcatyo. 4 месяца назад

    This channel makes learning funny and entertaining. How do y’all do it and make it look so effortless

  • @joaovieira1595
    @joaovieira1595 4 месяца назад +66

    As a non-native english speaker I never really understood the need for spelling bees. We don't really have much of those in my country and I just assumed everyone could spell words on the spot pretty easily.
    Although we did have some writing contests with a similar premise, and not everyone managed to ace them.
    I guess this video made me understand why stuff like this exists and why it's so hard for some people. Maybe it's because I read a lot of books as a kid, but I've gotten so familiar with seeing how words are written that I rarely ever forget how to spell them. Not only in my native language but in English too.
    I wonder if the saturation from reading at school and the existence of much more video and audio form content has led to less reading, and therefore worse spelling for the last few generations?

    • @SomeThingOrMaybeAnother
      @SomeThingOrMaybeAnother 4 месяца назад

      English just has generally fucky spelling-sounding relation. I blame the French.

    • @chesspiece4257
      @chesspiece4257 4 месяца назад +10

      the hardest part of english spelling is you never know if each letter is in there once or twice

    • @thalophy
      @thalophy 4 месяца назад +11

      I also noticed that non-native English speakers who are pretty good at English actually tend to be better at spelling, probably because we actively had to learn how to spell English words whereas native English speakers probably just... know the words somehow

    • @I.____.....__...__
      @I.____.....__...__ 4 месяца назад +2

      Yup, spelling-bees aren't a thing in many languages, especially phonetic ones. But imagine them in highly-agglutinative languages like a lot of the Eskaleut family, or even just German. 😬

    • @Ross_mo
      @Ross_mo 4 месяца назад +2

      I'm the same, but I checked out her spelling test (link in the description), and there are words there that I have no idea how to spell. You should definitely give it a go!

  • @austinsmith1293
    @austinsmith1293 4 месяца назад +10

    I'm using duolingo right now to learn spanish, and I like how they go about this. You get one chance to spell the word correctly, and if you get it wrong they tell you the answer and then continue. Then, after doing a few more words they ask you again to see if you remember the answer.

  • @swan00_
    @swan00_ 2 месяца назад

    as a three-time national spelling bee contestant, this was a good video :) was really funny to see all this stuff i’d studied years ago lol! and seeing “words of wisdom” was a hell of a blast from the past!!

  • @joeyshi2114
    @joeyshi2114 4 месяца назад

    Great job on the spellcheck game, it looks very polished!

  • @Carebearritual
    @Carebearritual 4 месяца назад +50

    I’ve been pretend playing this on twitter this whole time I thought it was a social experiment

  • @meep7547
    @meep7547 4 месяца назад +8

    As a person with dyslexia it is nice to see others being confused by english too, because after years of people seeming to just understand the language while you seem to be the only one not understanding. It's a weird language to spell (specially if your brain is just devloped in a way that makes spelling harder) but you explaining why it's so werid is a nice twist then just saying English is weird.

  • @PogieJoe
    @PogieJoe 4 месяца назад

    This is exactly the kind of breakdown that I just love from the team!

  • @jupitired777
    @jupitired777 12 дней назад

    love love the part on spelling with all the creestors, so cool to see Phil and hank

  • @egekahraman8985
    @egekahraman8985 4 месяца назад +60

    god being absolutely sure that you write a word correct on office yet seeing those dreaded red squigly lines is the worst

    • @I.____.....__...__
      @I.____.....__...__ 4 месяца назад +1

      "on office"? 🤨 So no worries about the green squiggle, huh?

    • @catelynh1020
      @catelynh1020 4 месяца назад

      Some coworkers will misspell my name to avoid a red squiggle.

  • @connernicewander8503
    @connernicewander8503 4 месяца назад +57

    Can we give a moment to appreciate how good this woman's content is? I don't know what makes it so enjoyable but I love it

    • @INNERLMNT
      @INNERLMNT 4 месяца назад +8

      What makes it enjoyable is Sabrina's determination, and the teamwork between her and her friends (Taha, Melissa and co.) to make it happen

  • @chaulk5
    @chaulk5 4 месяца назад

    I loved your video on English Spelling, but can we just talk about how good and engaging your editing is!??!?!?! DUDE as a follow editor I love your style! It is so engaging! AND THE PROJECTOR SLIDE SHOW!?!?! Come ON that was awesome! You're a great story teller and I see your craft! *clicks subscribe button*

  • @tarikhasan8869
    @tarikhasan8869 4 месяца назад

    Loved the video, and the website is so fricking cool!!!
    however a small improvement can be made, the audio files generated are named based on the word right? So the spelling can be found just opening the inspect module of the browser and finding the audio file name, it can easily be avoided just by using simple encryption decryption technique.
    That aside i really enjoyed the UI-UX and responsiveness, Hoping to see more of this videos soon!

  • @risxra
    @risxra 4 месяца назад +17

    As a linguistics student, this was such a fun watch! Congrats on learning the joys of the English language :)

  • @stephaniec3022
    @stephaniec3022 4 месяца назад +7

    As a writer, spelling has always been interesting for me. I get things wrong all the time. But I've also studied lots of older English literature, and learned about the differences between our modern spelling, and 1500s - 1600s English with it's non-consistent spelling or spelling how the word sounded. Glad you went on this journey!

  • @Daniel-hg2rq
    @Daniel-hg2rq 4 месяца назад +2

    13:40 Interesting we are experiencing harmattan in West Africa currently 😂

  • @ethhangs
    @ethhangs 3 месяца назад +2

    Vsauce has a good short on how to spell diarrhea
    While on the toilet constipated, he goes “DDDDIIIIIAAAARRRR *RRRR* HHHhhhHhHHhHhhHEEeEeE
    aaaaaa”

  • @accuratc
    @accuratc 4 месяца назад +16

    We finally getting context of spellcheck tweets 😭

  • @talideon
    @talideon 4 месяца назад +6

    Yep, one of the key spelling hacks in English is etymology! English is a bunch of different spelling systems mashed together, and to know the spelling, having its history talk to you is critical. Once you've a vague idea of the origin of a word and/or affix, the actual spelling gets vastly more obvious.

  • @blue_manatee3895
    @blue_manatee3895 4 месяца назад +1

    As a linguistics major in university, I really appreciate this video. One of the core tenets of modern linguistics is descriptivism, or observing and decribing how people actually use language, rather than telling people how it *should* be used (prescriptivism), but learning English in school is all about shoving grammar "rules" and spellings and punctuation into your head with none of the context. It's always nice to see someone doing their research and sharing some of the fascinating history behind things like the printing press revolution and the great vowel shift.
    Also, "cnidarian" is from Greek; they don't have the same rules as English on what sounds a word can start with (pneumonia, psychosis, chthonic, etc.), so starting with "cn" is perfectly valid, but in English the original consonant sound often becomes silent because we have more phonological restrictions.

  • @carlinemoon2484
    @carlinemoon2484 3 месяца назад

    I am glad that you covered twoof the main reasons that words are not spelled the way they sound: because we have changed the way they sound; and because we have adopted words from other languages, then forced them their pronounciations to fit into an alphabet that they were not designed for. Thank you. I really struggle all the time with spelling words.

  • @DKdrop
    @DKdrop 4 месяца назад +4

    That was such a smooth ad pivot that it took me a minute to realize that it was even an ad. I had my suspicions, but it wasn’t until Sabrina started talking about features that I was confident.

    • @sky01james28
      @sky01james28 4 месяца назад

      The blue bar filling up at the bottom of the screen confirmed my suspicions

  • @CatherineLu
    @CatherineLu 4 месяца назад +6

    I was excited about watching this because every AIP video is great, but then as the video went on, it became clearer and clearer that my entire academic and professional career was conspiring to make this video quite useless to me 😂 (English major, copyeditor, compiles a style guide, helped create/co-host two spelling bees at an infosec conference oops)

  • @anjanishah3156
    @anjanishah3156 3 месяца назад

    sabrinas ability to retain information from the mass amounts of research and sources that she uses is ACC crazy, i inspire to be like this...i also love the random obscure facts i get from these vids

  • @marinajakovacz
    @marinajakovacz 4 месяца назад +2

    Linguist here: "origins" matter a lot!! English is a warm soup made of ingredients from different languages and different times. Knowing that a specific word has French, German, Nordic or Latin origins could help me spell it correctly (the same sound in French, German or Latin could be spelled differently)

  • @lildramatic4760
    @lildramatic4760 4 месяца назад +3

    I have a similar story from fifth grade. I have fine motor issues and allowed to use a very simple word processor. It had spellcheck but you had to go through a whole menu-the word was Valentine’s which means it was the Friday before my birthday-Feb 21-and I think there was bribery motivating me? Anyway, my teacher walked behind me at exactly the wrong moment.
    Trauma.
    Only time I had tried it; only time I did try it.

  • @ijustlikethiscrapokay
    @ijustlikethiscrapokay 4 месяца назад +3

    i’m so glad it came back to history and etymology!! when you first said no one cares about word origin and that it was used to buy time, my linguistics heart died a little

  • @lynn858
    @lynn858 4 месяца назад +1

    History of English podcast if anyone wants to seriously geek out about the history, and culture related to the evolution of English.
    And I'm so glad this video covered learning why etymology is useful.
    That moment when it says "Japanese art if flower arranging" and there is furious backspacing. Yeah. That!

  • @y0Pretzels
    @y0Pretzels 4 месяца назад +1

    Origins can be useful for words that don't come from baseline English. Like how fancy words come from French? I remember I used that to spell the word "malaise" in middle school. Because I was studying French I was able to spell it despite the American-ized pronunciation and all that.