Sam being bullied by Sam and Sam is hilarious, yet I can’t wait for Sam’s response video pointing out all the mistakes Sam and Sam made whilst pointing out Sam’s mistakes
Would this include where Wendover Sam says "wibbly wobbly" should be "wobbly wibbly?" Because as a Brit I can confirm we would 100% say "wibbly wobbly" and I thought real life Sam did university in Scotland so he should know this and should have told Wendover Sam. Also English pounds are neither paper nor plastic, they are coins. The lowest value note is £5 (shown on screen), followed by 10, 20 and 50. HAI Sam you have your ammunition, shoot back!
@@benturner2693 Debatable regarding the pounds- correct for the singular, but for the plural, it's still mostly plastics. Fully agree though about Wibbly-wobbly!
There’s an error in this video’s title: it’s not every error committed. In the Most Complicated Language video, the last name of the person who wrote the paper is displayed as “Ekrich” on screen, while the paper shown behind shows “Ekirch” I’m surprised Sam from Wendover didn’t spot that with everything else from that video
And they never corrected a mistake about the longest train ride in the USA, he said the longest ride is the southwest Chief but it’s actually the Texas Eagle.
DUDE they are all the same guy and i can prove!!! please stop saying they are diferent people, everybody knows that since the brick video sam from half as interesting has bailed out and sam from wendover took over without ANYONE NOTICING! whats wrong with you guys how can you not see that the voice is the SAME!
@@RichardNDoper But it would still be a name made up of three characters which form one syllable and the last one of which is an 'm'. So close enough, I'd say.
Fact checking the factchecker: At 7:23, isn't "tired" a noun in the sentence "The moron used 'tired' as a noun."? It is in quotation marks, which means that the word is treated like a thing. The sentence has three nouns: "moron", "tired", and "noun."
Milk does naturally contain vitamin d. However, vitamin d3, the bio active form, is highly heat sensitive, so pasteurization destroys its activity. This is why they add vitamin d to milk. It does stop the development of rickets, so good job on that.
However, there is only a very low level indeed of vitamin d occurring naturally in milk. There are a lot higher figures in butter and cheese due to the higher fat levels. So, while he was wrong to say it was due to drinking milk, it has been seriously suggested that being able to consume butter and cheese did make a difference.
Fact checking the fact checker at 3:40 - geostationary satellites stay in the same spot about the earth. Sun synchronous ones pass over the same spot when the illumination from the sun is from the same angle each day and geosynchronous ones stay at the same latitude but their longitude varies.
Possibly also confusing Geostationary and Geosynchronous? Geostationary satellites always remain directly above the same location, Geosynchronous satellites will trace a fixed figure of 8 pattern relative to the surface, such that they pass over the same location at the same time every Sidereal day, and Sunsynchronus are similar but pass over the same location every full 24 hour day.
5:37 the city of London isn't part of the larger city "London", it's a completely different entity that just so happens to be completely surrounded by (and have the same name as) London.
Are the names not "London" and "City of London"? That doesn't really qualify as "the same name". They both have "London" in their name and there is understandable confusion but they don't have the same name.
It's always great when RUclipsrs get along well enough that they can make fun of each other. You can tell from this video that Sam from HAI and Sam from Wendover are great at collaborating.
While herpetologists like to use "poison" in a narrow sense that only applies to oral poisons, in other fields, the term is used more broadly to refer to _any_ toxic substance, whether ingested, injected, inhaled, or whatever. It's not inaccurate to say that snakes can poison you, just imprecise.
3:43 Mistake-ception?? He was (kinda) right about Geosynchronous Orbits, it stays over the same terrestrial spot cuz its orbital period(the time it takes to do one orbit) is the same as one day(not 24hr one day tho the more exact one, 23hrs 56mins and 4 secs) The one where it goes over a spot at the same local time everyday is Sun-Synchronous And also theres an extra distinction between Geosynchronous and GeoSTATIONARY where Geostationary orbits are equatorial orbits while Geosynchronous is the more general term but it includes inclined orbits And when its inclined it looks like the satellite is swiveling north and soutb Extra error caused by the error: Since he Described Sun Synchronous Orbits, he shouldnt be using a top view of Earth because Sun Synchronous orbits are Near Polar, so a side view of earth would be better
@@3DPrintingRockets ye Tho i did add the difference between geosynchronous and geostationary cuz geosynchronous orbits include inclined orbits which make it look like the satellite is swiveling north and south
I really appreciate this. Knowing that you not only know of your mistakes, but also tell us about them, it lets us know you take it seriously. I genuinely appreciate this.
It is incredible Sam, Sam, and Sam were able to find a common free time to collaborate. I could imagine scheduling the making of this video is a nightmare to do!
3:30 No, what you described is sun-synchronous. An orbit when you stay above the same place is geostationary. An earth-synchronous orbit is like geostationary, but your orbital inclination isn't 0.
@@richardmillhousenixon your interpretation is correct, but he said that you are above the same spot at the same time of day. Which is true for geo-synchronous orbits, but also for any orbit with a 24 h period or a sun-synchronous orbit.
@@ВикторФирсов-е9ф You can be correct without being completely correct, and besides, the explanation he gave was the simplest explanation that normal people (i.e. people completely unfamiliar with orbital mechanics) could understand. Geosynchronous orbits are the only orbits (that I'm aware of) in which the satellite will pass over a given location every 12 hours for any point along the apparent arc (not true for orbits with a period of 12 hours since the earth rotates too), or 24 hours for the ends of the arc.
There is an error in this too- geosynchronous satellites can move across the surface of the earth, but not around the earth. Their ground track stays contained in a narrow band of longitudes. If the earth was moving with the line at 3:38, the graphic would be correct. Or maybe just show a ground track instead.
Actually, in the one about ‘tired’ being a noun, you were wrong. In the sentence “The moron used “tired” as a noun.” ‘tired’ actually would be a noun, because you are referring to the word ‘tired’ which is a thing, instead of the adjective ‘tired’. What you meant to say is that ‘tired’ was not the subject of that sentence, it’s the object.
Actually, just because there is a noun phrase doesn't mean that any particular word is being used as a noun. The quotation forms a noun phrase, but the word inside the quotation is being quoted in its function as an adjective.
@@killerbee.13 you’re right, this is a noun phrase, but ‘tired’ in this sentence still isn’t being used as an adjective, it is being used only to refer to itself as a word, making it a thing in this context.
@@jonathandaffron1781 It's either being quoted as an adjective, or it has no part of speech at all due to not being part of a sentence. In no sense is it a noun in itself (it does not identify a person, place, or thing), unless you ignore the distinction between quotation and use.
7:17 "a noun is used to describe a person, place, or thing" Guys, I feel like we're still not clear on this one. A noun **is** a person, place, or thing. You're thinking of an *adjective* . Don't worry, you'll get there one day
5:29 the content of the headline says: "A rencently removed video found on RUclips has been causing quite the stir due to a mispoken word. It has lead to the unanimously declared that because of the video, all 3,006 [sic] counties found throughout all 50 states will now become their own individual countries. Each new county-country will operate separately, meaning that the United States of America and its 50 states will no longer be recognized. This has caused many to scramble to get updated passports since now their families and even their jobs will be located in different countries. Initially, people pointed the finger at video creator, Sam, from _Wendover Productions_ as the culprit behind the video responsible. However, Sam has since denied the claim saying 'I would never be responsible for such an irresponsible error. My videos are always the most superior of quality. I think that guy from _Half As Interesting_ [sic] is responsible for this!' "
To everyone who says Sam from Wendover, Sam from HaI, and Sam from extremities is the same guy: they’re not. Have you ever seen them in the same room together? Because I now have. RUclips videos NEVER lie.
It's ironic, there's a mistake in this video. At 5:37, Sam from Extremities says that the City of London is a tiny part of London. That's kind of true, but in reality, the City of London is an entirely separate city with its own government and not part of London. It is surrounded by London on all sides, but it isn't part of London. Checkmate.
You didn't even list the fact that in the previous mistakes video, you missed the fact that at 5:18 in the "The Mathematical Loophole that Broke the Lottery" video, you said "$484,463.5" but put "$484,206" on the screen.
Not in the context of that video - because it was precisely the point of that video to show how english native speakers have an intuitive "correct" order of things even when they are nonsensical words. Point in case: "wobbly-wibbly" just _sounds wrong_ for any native speaker. He pronounced it correctly when he tried to show that the "wrong" pronounciation (shown on screen) would sound wierd...
@@QemeH Ah, the phrasing of this error video makes it seem like "wibbly-wobbly" is *always* wrong, as it's preceeeded by "You don't see my pronunciations going wobbly-wibbly, or as you'd put it, wibbly-wobbly", while showing wobbly-wibbly on the screen. So it just sounded like he was saying "wobbly-wibbly" is *always* the way, when it's not, it's only correct when your goal is to be incorrect.
That's why you need the help of a professional who trade and understand the market more to earn good income. These professionals understand the market like it's there own farm and makes maximum profits for investors.
Am I the only one thinking 'man these mistakes are so minor that it actually gives me more confidence in the channel'? hahaha Also, amazing title. Bravo
VERY IMPRESSIVE - if only news outlets were so transparent. We all get it wrong, admitting it means we learn from it rather than continuing our ignorance.
7:27 no, "moron" is not THE noun in that sentence. The sentence contains two nouns, the other one being... well... "noun". So, "moron" is A noun, but not THE noun.
It actually contains three; "tired" in the context of that sentence is a noun, since it's referring to the word "tired" and not the concept of being tired.
@@brianb.6356 I'd say the quotation is a noun *phrase*, but it's not *a noun*. It doesn't identify a person, place, or thing, instead the word itself is being referred to.
@@m0llux but the word "tired" doesn't identify itself, instead, it's being quoted. There's a distinction between quotation and use. In this instance, the quotation itself is acting as a noun phrase, but the word being quoted does not identify anything.
This was so fun! I loved this one! So mean to his own channels, why! I love that they all have their own "personality", despite not really being separate entities or people.
Ironic, in a video about mistakes there is a mistake in the description. This suggestion link is incorrect, it’s /suggest but it should be /suggestions
I absolutely loved the roleplay :'D also yeah: only about 10k people here speak romanch, it sounds very... strange^^ I never encountered a romansh speaking person until a few days ago, so its pretty rare
satellites at same time, same spot : is sunsynchronous. you made another mistake lol. geosynchronous satellites move exactly as the same speed as their nadir point, making the appear static.
Geosynchronous satellites are not necessarily in an equatorial orbit, even though their orbital period matches the earth’s rotation, meaning they travel north and south along the same line of longitude. geostationary satellites stay over the exact same point because they are in equatorial orbits and their orbital period is still 24 ish hours. Sun synchronous orbits are entirely different and rely on some orbital mechanics to rotate the orbit constantly so that the satellite can stay in the sunlight 24/7/365. Their orbital periods are much lower than 24 hours and their inclination is a little more than 90 degrees, meaning they orbit north-south and slightly backwards
Fact checkception: at 1:34 - thats not lactAse, but lactOse a sugar. it is produced in mammary glands. LactAse on the other hand is an enzyme splitting lactOse into glucose and galactose. You can find that enzyme in smaller intestine.
damn sam. 4 years already? what a journey it has been. I've been subbed even BEFORE the first video and i watched every single one. mistakes are what makes your videos interesting and entertaining. never stop doing these.
This is a great video, Sam from Wendover! You should consider doing a collaboration with Tom Scott on the world's shortest commercial flight!
@Tom Tom ok bub stop with the conspiracy theories
@Tom Tom they sound nothing alike
Thatt sure would be nice! Though its extremely unlikeley that there would ever be a collab between those two, their cintent styles dont match at all!
@Tom Tom its OK,just don't do it again 😌
(some of yall are missing the joke)
ruclips.net/video/dzYP01CPC6E/видео.html
Sam being bullied by Sam and Sam is hilarious, yet I can’t wait for Sam’s response video pointing out all the mistakes Sam and Sam made whilst pointing out Sam’s mistakes
My head hurts.
Real peak Sam and Sam content.
Would this include where Wendover Sam says "wibbly wobbly" should be "wobbly wibbly?" Because as a Brit I can confirm we would 100% say "wibbly wobbly" and I thought real life Sam did university in Scotland so he should know this and should have told Wendover Sam.
Also English pounds are neither paper nor plastic, they are coins. The lowest value note is £5 (shown on screen), followed by 10, 20 and 50. HAI Sam you have your ammunition, shoot back!
@@benturner2693 Debatable regarding the pounds- correct for the singular, but for the plural, it's still mostly plastics. Fully agree though about Wibbly-wobbly!
I am so confused are they the same person or not? Please help
“Did you just make a joke!? You never ma-“ “Shut up!
My favorite line
My favorite was Sam cutting Sam of with the long "Aaaaaaaand" at 8:17
My favorite character in this vid was Sam
Yeah
I love how you embrace your evident spiraling into madness and multiple personalities
This was fun asf
@@AxxLAfriku bro stop spamming
Wdym it’s 2 people
@@KayJblue no there are 3 people involved. Don't forget Sam.
@@AbsoluteGorbSupreme Just report his comments and go on, it's not worth the hassle.
Did faking
There’s an error in this video’s title: it’s not every error committed. In the Most Complicated Language video, the last name of the person who wrote the paper is displayed as “Ekrich” on screen, while the paper shown behind shows “Ekirch” I’m surprised Sam from Wendover didn’t spot that with everything else from that video
And he stressed the wrong syllable.
We need to cancel Sam.
and he pronounced /ʃ/ as /s/ and /ur/ as /ɚ/
@@juliepileofash How distasteful
And they never corrected a mistake about the longest train ride in the USA, he said the longest ride is the southwest Chief but it’s actually the Texas Eagle.
Whoa, how did they find so many educational channels with narrators named Sam?
sam is just the only name now
I dont get it. I mean they have the same name, but they sound totally different....
Oh dear god there's a third.
The same way there are so many channels with a narrator named Simon Whistler.
Waiting for next years with sam o nella added
DUDE they are all the same guy and i can prove!!! please stop saying they are diferent people, everybody knows that since the brick video sam from half as interesting has bailed out and sam from wendover took over without ANYONE NOTICING! whats wrong with you guys how can you not see that the voice is the SAME!
Definite missed opportunity getting Tom Scott to do that linguistics bit
I was expecting that
But then you'll have broken the tradition of everyone in the video named Sam.
"Hey, I'm sam from Tom Scott..."
No, Tom has everyone on RUclips appear in _his_ videos, not the other way around.
@@RichardNDoper But it would still be a name made up of three characters which form one syllable and the last one of which is an 'm'. So close enough, I'd say.
As a guy from Switzerland, don't worry, we forget the Romansch speakers exist too.
I should not have laughed that hard 🤣🤣🤣
Dude...
Dude.... Uncool.
No, we don't
Yes, we do
Fact checking the factchecker: At 7:23, isn't "tired" a noun in the sentence "The moron used 'tired' as a noun."? It is in quotation marks, which means that the word is treated like a thing. The sentence has three nouns: "moron", "tired", and "noun."
Shh. He hasn't figured out subjects yet.
yes tired is a noun in that sentence
I think Sam meant "tired" wasn't the subject of the sentence in that sentence, as it's instead an object.
ok
+
This will be Full As Interesting, as usual.
Thrice as interesting actually
@@DyslexicMitochondria your username made me click on your profile. Your channel is a hidden gem bro
@@DyslexicMitochondria no just full
@@anameisntenough Lol you copy-pasted the same thing on my comment on RLL's North Korea video, kinda suspect...
@@LeveyHere tbh its prob the guys alt
Milk does naturally contain vitamin d. However, vitamin d3, the bio active form, is highly heat sensitive, so pasteurization destroys its activity. This is why they add vitamin d to milk. It does stop the development of rickets, so good job on that.
Damn, a mistake in the mistakes video. That sucks.
@@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 IIRC ppl say he does that every time (though, probably not intentionally).
However, there is only a very low level indeed of vitamin d occurring naturally in milk. There are a lot higher figures in butter and cheese due to the higher fat levels. So, while he was wrong to say it was due to drinking milk, it has been seriously suggested that being able to consume butter and cheese did make a difference.
5:41 the English pound is actually a piece of metal, as £1s are coins, not notes.
@Something sometime stop spamming
Had to pause the video and see of someone had pointed this out as soon as I saw it - especially as he used a £5 note in the graphic.
Adam Ant tells me to "Write it on a Pound Note", so obviously they exist!
@petertrudelljr there isn’t any £1 notes anymore
@@petertrudelljr not for quite a few decades now.
Fact checking the fact checker at 3:40 - geostationary satellites stay in the same spot about the earth. Sun synchronous ones pass over the same spot when the illumination from the sun is from the same angle each day and geosynchronous ones stay at the same latitude but their longitude varies.
Exactly I was questioning my own knowledge when that came up
Came to the comments looking for this. Thank you.
Possibly also confusing Geostationary and Geosynchronous? Geostationary satellites always remain directly above the same location, Geosynchronous satellites will trace a fixed figure of 8 pattern relative to the surface, such that they pass over the same location at the same time every Sidereal day, and Sunsynchronus are similar but pass over the same location every full 24 hour day.
That will be included in the fifth edition of mistakes.
5:37 the city of London isn't part of the larger city "London", it's a completely different entity that just so happens to be completely surrounded by (and have the same name as) London.
the correction video needs a correction video
CGP Grey should hold this lesson.
Though it was nice that the usual assumption of England, Britain and London all being the exact same thing wasn't the case for that video...
A country entirely surrounded by another country is called an enclave. But what's a city entirely surrounded by another city?
Are the names not "London" and "City of London"? That doesn't really qualify as "the same name". They both have "London" in their name and there is understandable confusion but they don't have the same name.
Poor Half as Interesting. Leave him alone, Wendover! He's doing his best! 😭
you mean poor
Extremities he is bullied by everybody!
Poor people who subscribe to Nebula more like it
I've been around too long: I remember almost every video he references
Those are just from the last year, though...
@Something sometime why exactly is an islamic looking religious song needed here?
I watched them all lol. not all when they came out though
It's always great when RUclipsrs get along well enough that they can make fun of each other. You can tell from this video that Sam from HAI and Sam from Wendover are great at collaborating.
And there's a mistake in this one! Snake venom molecules are too big to enter the blood stream. Instead snake venom enters the lymphatic system
And there is a mistake in this comment too (foo)!🤓
@@inspectorgadget8234 thats my fat fingers on my phone 😂 edited it now
@@bryanpearce08 haha.
nice was going to comment this too
I have been anticipating this video for MONTHS now thank you Sam from HAI
Ikr my wait is finally done!
And thank you Sam from Wendover
@@NoodleProductions ofc ofc how could I forget Sam from Wendover who also partook in this video!
@Something sometime why are you spamming??
@@nato5868 probably trying to get a bit of traction for his video. Make sure you don't click on the link to give him the visual and just report him.
Alternative title: Wendover roast himself for 8 minutes
No. wendover roasts HAI. Wendover and HAI are different people
@@BelcarrigFarm are they though?
@@csanadhorvath they are
@@BelcarrigFarm how come their voices sound so similar and they have the same name (Sam) ?
@@csanadhorvath lots of people are named sam. They Don't sound anything alike
4:52
I find it amusing that he thinks that you can doomscroll Twitter on an old landline
While herpetologists like to use "poison" in a narrow sense that only applies to oral poisons, in other fields, the term is used more broadly to refer to _any_ toxic substance, whether ingested, injected, inhaled, or whatever. It's not inaccurate to say that snakes can poison you, just imprecise.
Some snakes are actually poisonous: spectacled cobra (Naja naja), common krait (Bungarus caeruleus), Russell's viper (Daboia russelii), and saw-scaled viper (Echis carinatus)
What a mess! Why don't we just say toxin/intoxicate instead?.. 🤔
i can't wait for Every Mistake We've Ever Made V: Mystic Errors
embodiment of scarlet errors?
Every Mistake We've Ever Made V: Skyrim
I'd prefer Empire Strikes Over or something.
A good day to list every mistake we've ever made.
Samira Peri copyright strikes back
3:43
Mistake-ception??
He was (kinda) right about Geosynchronous Orbits, it stays over the same terrestrial spot cuz its orbital period(the time it takes to do one orbit) is the same as one day(not 24hr one day tho the more exact one, 23hrs 56mins and 4 secs)
The one where it goes over a spot at the same local time everyday is Sun-Synchronous
And also theres an extra distinction between Geosynchronous and GeoSTATIONARY where Geostationary orbits are equatorial orbits while Geosynchronous is the more general term but it includes inclined orbits
And when its inclined it looks like the satellite is swiveling north and soutb
Extra error caused by the error: Since he Described Sun Synchronous Orbits, he shouldnt be using a top view of Earth because Sun Synchronous orbits are Near Polar, so a side view of earth would be better
.
@@DemeDemetre Period / full stop must *die*
I had the same reaction, geosynchronous orbit have the same period has one rotation of the Earth therefore appearing as a static point in the sky
@@3DPrintingRockets ye
Tho i did add the difference between geosynchronous and geostationary cuz geosynchronous orbits include inclined orbits which make it look like the satellite is swiveling north and south
Nah. Sun-synch doesn't necessarily end up at the same spot. It just keeps a semi-constant local time (switches between night and day).
The Logistics of Reading Overly Critical Comments about Simple Meaningless Mistakes 😂
this deserves more likes man
Yea sometimes people take things too seriously
With all these mistakes there may be new career opportunities at Wendover. Keep up the GRATE work!
I really appreciate this. Knowing that you not only know of your mistakes, but also tell us about them, it lets us know you take it seriously. I genuinely appreciate this.
Tired can be a noun. “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, the wretched refuse of your teeming shore.”
Next is Every mistakes from "Every Mistake We've Ever Make IV: A New Nope"
5:24 And so, the Holy American Empire was born.
It is incredible Sam, Sam, and Sam were able to find a common free time to collaborate. I could imagine scheduling the making of this video is a nightmare to do!
Mistake you missed: the “why dictionaries have fake words” video was titled “why dictators have fake words” in the first few minutes of it being up
3:30 No, what you described is sun-synchronous. An orbit when you stay above the same place is geostationary. An earth-synchronous orbit is like geostationary, but your orbital inclination isn't 0.
No, he said the right thing geosynchronous is where you stay in the same longitude, but your latitude varies
@@richardmillhousenixon your interpretation is correct, but he said that you are above the same spot at the same time of day. Which is true for geo-synchronous orbits, but also for any orbit with a 24 h period or a sun-synchronous orbit.
@@ВикторФирсов-е9ф You can be correct without being completely correct, and besides, the explanation he gave was the simplest explanation that normal people (i.e. people completely unfamiliar with orbital mechanics) could understand. Geosynchronous orbits are the only orbits (that I'm aware of) in which the satellite will pass over a given location every 12 hours for any point along the apparent arc (not true for orbits with a period of 12 hours since the earth rotates too), or 24 hours for the ends of the arc.
Wendover: Makes a video correcting mistakes.
Me at 2:12: snake venom doesn’t travel in the bloodstream, it moves through the lymphatic system
5:58 For a split second I thought this was Tom Scott returning the favor from his last video.
6:25 did he not also catch that "degradation" is spelled wrong?
Timestamp 4:57, * *doom scrolls Twitter using a house phone or cell phone from 90’s (1990’s)* *
I love when channels I watch make collaborations together. They all seem to get along well together.
crazy that Sam actually got the real Wendover productions for a cameo, Wendover is such an awesome channel!
Man I love you Sam from Hai and you too Sam from Vendover Productions. You two are some of the best youtubers ever.
I love how all the narrators have SLIGHTLY different accidents
… or accents
@@MottyGlix A comment with a mistake under the video correcting mistakes? Gah!
4:35 Sam from HAI is correct, it does sound stupid.
I thought this was about Star Wars at first lol
Same lmao
Seriously big props to a channel that willingly points out all of its mistakes, many of which went completely unnoticed.
Good job. Really felt irritated at Sam for picking on Sam. Also neat to see someone acknowledge their mistakes instead of ignoring them and moving on.
There is an error in this too- geosynchronous satellites can move across the surface of the earth, but not around the earth. Their ground track stays contained in a narrow band of longitudes. If the earth was moving with the line at 3:38, the graphic would be correct. Or maybe just show a ground track instead.
i was not expecting a video about a crazy man talking to himself about the mistakes of the past
Actually, in the one about ‘tired’ being a noun, you were wrong. In the sentence “The moron used “tired” as a noun.” ‘tired’ actually would be a noun, because you are referring to the word ‘tired’ which is a thing, instead of the adjective ‘tired’. What you meant to say is that ‘tired’ was not the subject of that sentence, it’s the object.
time for another funny video :D
Why is perfection so difficult to reach?
Actually, just because there is a noun phrase doesn't mean that any particular word is being used as a noun. The quotation forms a noun phrase, but the word inside the quotation is being quoted in its function as an adjective.
@@killerbee.13 you’re right, this is a noun phrase, but ‘tired’ in this sentence still isn’t being used as an adjective, it is being used only to refer to itself as a word, making it a thing in this context.
@@jonathandaffron1781 It's either being quoted as an adjective, or it has no part of speech at all due to not being part of a sentence. In no sense is it a noun in itself (it does not identify a person, place, or thing), unless you ignore the distinction between quotation and use.
As someone who likes languages, hearing the word "phenomes" was rather painful
its a /foʊnim/
The day we’ve all been waiting for… wendover made a joke
6:20 actually it was almost a full, year, not 10 months, Sam from Wendover Productions (video was posted on September 3rd)
7:17 "a noun is used to describe a person, place, or thing"
Guys, I feel like we're still not clear on this one. A noun **is** a person, place, or thing. You're thinking of an *adjective* . Don't worry, you'll get there one day
5:29 the content of the headline says:
"A rencently removed video found on RUclips has been causing quite the stir due to a mispoken word. It has lead to the unanimously declared that because of the video, all 3,006 [sic] counties found throughout all 50 states will now become their own individual countries. Each new county-country will operate separately, meaning that the United States of America and its 50 states will no longer be recognized.
This has caused many to scramble to get updated passports since now their families and even their jobs will be located in different countries. Initially, people pointed the finger at video creator, Sam, from _Wendover Productions_ as the culprit behind the video responsible. However, Sam has since denied the claim saying 'I would never be responsible for such an irresponsible error. My videos are always the most superior of quality. I think that guy from _Half As Interesting_ [sic] is responsible for this!' "
Thanks alot i read it too.
the sam extended universe is hilarious
But "wibbly-wobbly" is the right way to say it!
"The logistics of correcting your own mistakes"
To everyone who says Sam from Wendover, Sam from HaI, and Sam from extremities is the same guy: they’re not.
Have you ever seen them in the same room together? Because I now have.
RUclips videos NEVER lie.
"Infinity War is the most ambitious crossover in cinematic history"
Wendover:
I'm sure wendover n HAI are not the same....like at all
It's ironic, there's a mistake in this video. At 5:37, Sam from Extremities says that the City of London is a tiny part of London. That's kind of true, but in reality, the City of London is an entirely separate city with its own government and not part of London. It is surrounded by London on all sides, but it isn't part of London. Checkmate.
In “the idiot used ‘tired’ as a noun”, “tired” would actually be a noun.
But what if the idiot didn't 'identify as' tired?
But not the noun
7:03 that’s because he got drunk doing jet lag
First time i saw Wendover angry
Are we going to ignore that while he was calling out “enviromental” he was overlooking “degredation” right below it? 6:25
You didn't even list the fact that in the previous mistakes video, you missed the fact that at 5:18 in the "The Mathematical Loophole that Broke the Lottery" video, you said "$484,463.5" but put "$484,206" on the screen.
Gotta leave some content for episode V
"I'm drunk right now!" Sam has revealed his true power
This was mindbendingly meta
Yet confusingly coherent.
"The logistics of the mistakes made by HAI"
I would have loved to see Sam from Showmakers show up.
well he didn't so tough luck buddy
@@h-Films Okay.
I love it how planes is a seperate topic
7:11 I have to disagree. Wibbly-Wobbly is correct.
Not in the context of that video - because it was precisely the point of that video to show how english native speakers have an intuitive "correct" order of things even when they are nonsensical words. Point in case: "wobbly-wibbly" just _sounds wrong_ for any native speaker. He pronounced it correctly when he tried to show that the "wrong" pronounciation (shown on screen) would sound wierd...
@@QemeH Ah, the phrasing of this error video makes it seem like "wibbly-wobbly" is *always* wrong, as it's preceeeded by "You don't see my pronunciations going wobbly-wibbly, or as you'd put it, wibbly-wobbly", while showing wobbly-wibbly on the screen. So it just sounded like he was saying "wobbly-wibbly" is *always* the way, when it's not, it's only correct when your goal is to be incorrect.
Honestly, all the Sams are so good at teaching each other.
Would be amazing if you did a collaboration with Sam from Wendover and Sam from Extremites more often
I'm beginning to think that that Sam intentionally plants mistakes just so he can make these videos. Quite clever tbh
Hilarious! I can’t believe we get this, and a Tom Scott Collab!
Can we appreciate how at 5:30 they actually type out an article instead of just random text
The economy hardship, recession, unemployment and loss of job caused by covid pandemic is enough to push people into financial ventures.
I have secured financial freedom by investing in bonds, equities, EFT's and some digital currencies
I wanted to invest more on digital Digital currency (crypto) but the fluctuations in crypto value discouraged me into dumping.
That's why you need the help of a professional who trade and understand the market more to earn good income. These professionals understand the market like it's there own farm and makes maximum profits for investors.
wow I'm just shock someone mentioned and recommended expert Mrs Mitchell Roland, I thought people don't know her.... She is really good and awesome !
Mrs Mitchell is obviously the best broker. I invested $4,500 with her and she made me profit $48,100 in 2 weeks and 3 days. It was mind blowing.
I actually love all the channels. Keep up the great work
Am I the only one thinking 'man these mistakes are so minor that it actually gives me more confidence in the channel'? hahaha
Also, amazing title. Bravo
VERY IMPRESSIVE - if only news outlets were so transparent. We all get it wrong, admitting it means we learn from it rather than continuing our ignorance.
So is The Horizon and Half as Interesting the same people?
you have a point
Sam from HAI and Tom Scott both got to make crossovers with Sam from Wendover in the same week. What a time to be alive!
That extremities logo is looking awfully similar to old Aperture Science...
These just keep getting better
7:27 no, "moron" is not THE noun in that sentence. The sentence contains two nouns, the other one being... well... "noun". So, "moron" is A noun, but not THE noun.
It actually contains three; "tired" in the context of that sentence is a noun, since it's referring to the word "tired" and not the concept of being tired.
@@brianb.6356 Yeah, I totally missed that! Good spot!
@@brianb.6356 I'd say the quotation is a noun *phrase*, but it's not *a noun*. It doesn't identify a person, place, or thing, instead the word itself is being referred to.
@@killerbee.13 Which, in this case, is *a thing*. The sentence talks about the word "tired", which is a thing in this context.
@@m0llux but the word "tired" doesn't identify itself, instead, it's being quoted. There's a distinction between quotation and use. In this instance, the quotation itself is acting as a noun phrase, but the word being quoted does not identify anything.
This was so fun! I loved this one! So mean to his own channels, why!
I love that they all have their own "personality", despite not really being separate entities or people.
Ironic, in a video about mistakes there is a mistake in the description. This suggestion link is incorrect, it’s /suggest but it should be /suggestions
all 3 of my favourite individual creators in one video!
I absolutely loved the roleplay :'D
also yeah: only about 10k people here speak romanch, it sounds very... strange^^
I never encountered a romansh speaking person until a few days ago, so its pretty rare
What does Romansch sound like
"Please, if you can make him cry..." - Wendower Sam to Extremities Sam
It is pronounced FebRUary, despite the common misconception of febuary
I'm so glad Sam from HAI and Sam from Wendover managed to settle their differences and get us this crossover.
One is stuck playing the impassioned protagonist in one’s Subjective Narrative of Self🎈
Plot Twist: Sam intentionally builds in mistakes so he can make this video series.
satellites at same time, same spot : is sunsynchronous.
you made another mistake lol. geosynchronous satellites move exactly as the same speed as their nadir point, making the appear static.
Geosynchronous satellites are not necessarily in an equatorial orbit, even though their orbital period matches the earth’s rotation, meaning they travel north and south along the same line of longitude. geostationary satellites stay over the exact same point because they are in equatorial orbits and their orbital period is still 24 ish hours. Sun synchronous orbits are entirely different and rely on some orbital mechanics to rotate the orbit constantly so that the satellite can stay in the sunlight 24/7/365. Their orbital periods are much lower than 24 hours and their inclination is a little more than 90 degrees, meaning they orbit north-south and slightly backwards
@@Nightwolf323 indeed. geostationary is the correct word
YAY SOMEONE ELSE NOTICED-
Fact checkception: at 1:34 - thats not lactAse, but lactOse a sugar. it is produced in mammary glands. LactAse on the other hand is an enzyme splitting lactOse into glucose and galactose. You can find that enzyme in smaller intestine.
Where’s the mistake in this video 😳
4:48 I love you Sam for these two corrections ❤️.
who else says wibbly-wobbly
damn sam. 4 years already? what a journey it has been. I've been subbed even BEFORE the first video and i watched every single one. mistakes are what makes your videos interesting and entertaining. never stop doing these.