I once called it herb with a silent "h" while I was traveling NZ and was pretty rudely corrected into saying herb with an h in the beginning because otherwise I would "sound like a hillbilly farmer". Now that I heard a teacher call it herb with a silent h I actually did some digging and it seems like it was not me who was being ignorant after all. "This word was borrowed into English from Old French, and it didn't have either the letter 'H' or the /h/ sound." "herb (n.) c. 1300, erbe "non-woody plant," especially a leafy vegetable used for human food, from Old French erbe "grass, herb, plant fed to animals" (12c., Modern French herbe), from Latin herba "grass, an herb; herbage, turf, weeds"
@@Irieification Maybe you should go one step earlier to know French borrowed the word from Greek "herba" which means "grass or herb", with a /h/ sound. In British English, it's with /h/ sound while it exists in both pronunciations in American English.
who else watching this cause of a college course
步驟如何實施呢? /步驟一:團體討論專家小組 步驟二:專家小組討論園藝的不同面向 步驟三:其他同學分組 步驟四:請一位專家到他的家庭小組和組員討論 步驟五:專家小組討論 分享在家庭小組的研究 步驟六:全班召集團體討論(分享剛所學到的知識)、(老師在黑板上寫出學生分析的結構圖)
謝謝
I love this! Thanks for sharing!
Does Jigsaw method apply effectively to prefirst class?
now this kids are now adults
What is home group I don't get it
home group -> main group
it is the principal group, where they started working as a team.
It's the group the students go back to teach and learn from.
🖐️🖐️🖐️🖐️🖐️
Even kids can read that there is an "h" in the word
I once called it herb with a silent "h" while I was traveling NZ and was pretty rudely corrected into saying herb with an h in the beginning because otherwise I would "sound like a hillbilly farmer". Now that I heard a teacher call it herb with a silent h I actually did some digging and it seems like it was not me who was being ignorant after all.
"This word was borrowed into English from Old French, and it didn't have either the letter 'H' or the /h/ sound."
"herb (n.) c. 1300, erbe "non-woody plant," especially a leafy vegetable used for human food, from Old French erbe "grass, herb, plant fed to animals" (12c., Modern French herbe), from Latin herba "grass, an herb; herbage, turf, weeds"
@@Irieification Maybe you should go one step earlier to know French borrowed the word from Greek "herba" which means "grass or herb", with a /h/ sound. In British English, it's with /h/ sound while it exists in both pronunciations in American English.
back when kids were learning normal stuff!