8 Species With Awful Names

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @SciShow
    @SciShow  4 года назад +279

    Thanks to the commenters pointing out our mistranslation of the German "Blindschleiche"! Schleiche doesn't mean snake, but rather, "sneak", though in this case, it's just the German word for these animals.

    • @SarimDeLaurec
      @SarimDeLaurec 4 года назад +28

      @@miekekuppen9275 That might be, but it does not derive from blind. Fom it's old high german root it would be shiny sneak(er). German is full of things that sound like modern german, but derive from other roots and have therefore other meanings.

    • @threesixtydegreeorbits2047
      @threesixtydegreeorbits2047 4 года назад +1

      HF_Alex Alex with the facts, Yo!

    • @jimmyshrimbe9361
      @jimmyshrimbe9361 4 года назад

      Seems you weren’t exactly wrong, though.

    • @RickySTT
      @RickySTT 4 года назад +1

      Did you get how to pronounce “Dominica”?

    • @PRdeSO
      @PRdeSO 4 года назад +1

      Walnuts, they're Walmart's nuts

  • @t.vinters3128
    @t.vinters3128 4 года назад +488

    "Snake Lily" is goth. "Corpse flower" is straight-out gore-metal.

    • @devinm.6149
      @devinm.6149 3 года назад +6

      "Snake Lily" is emo, "Corpse Flower" is goth, how it's used can make gore- metal.

    • @genthefrog18
      @genthefrog18 3 года назад +14

      devil's tongue is the metal one

    • @TheRealArtimusKnight
      @TheRealArtimusKnight 2 года назад +1

      Corpse flower sounds like a really shitty emo band

    • @justayoutuber1906
      @justayoutuber1906 Год назад +3

      I cross-bred the two and got a "mishapen penis that smells like death". But the plant turned out fine.

    • @ninaexmachina
      @ninaexmachina 6 месяцев назад

      @@justayoutuber1906 welp, according to text in this video, the corpse flower is already the misshapen penis that smells like death! Specifically, *giant* misshapen penis that smells like death. So I guess you've got two and a half now, though I can't speak to all their sizes...

  • @logitech4873
    @logitech4873 4 года назад +417

    The Norwegian name for dragonfly is "øyenstikker", which means "eye stabber"
    The name made me very afraid of them as a kid.

    • @snowball_from_earth
      @snowball_from_earth 4 года назад +46

      The English name "Earwig" is also already terrifying enough without having it translated to ear-pincher or liteally ear-burrower... Thanks German language...

    • @andrewsheng5341
      @andrewsheng5341 4 года назад +9

      Snowball well earwigs actually get in your ear though so the name is kinda warranted

    • @snowball_from_earth
      @snowball_from_earth 4 года назад +19

      @@andrewsheng5341 they could, but they don't.

    • @sogerc1
      @sogerc1 4 года назад +12

      Well, in Hungarian a dragonfly is called a "sieve maker", I mean WTF? Even eye stabber is better than that. Maybe it reminded our ancestors to a big needle that was used to make strainers, I'm just speculating.

    • @shimapaws
      @shimapaws 4 года назад +10

      @@andrewsheng5341 That is actually a myth, since earwigs are pretty much harmless.

  • @tardiskeeper6
    @tardiskeeper6 4 года назад +177

    "seems we call any long noodly creature a worm" made me laugh

  • @Asterius_101
    @Asterius_101 4 года назад +146

    "It's more than 2 but still very few"
    -Me describing my braincells

  • @thatdarnskag5043
    @thatdarnskag5043 4 года назад +594

    The biologists just went full “tastes like chicken” meme when naming that frog.

    • @macnutz4206
      @macnutz4206 4 года назад +17

      I suspect that biologists did not come up with that name any more than biologists refer to hog testes as "mountain oysters". :):)

    • @rebootmyth8753
      @rebootmyth8753 4 года назад +20

      The Chinese term for frog meat (like how pork is to pig) is literally "paddy field chicken"

    • @aliceignis
      @aliceignis 4 года назад +2

      who started this "tastes like chicken" anyway?

    • @BobBob-pj3qo
      @BobBob-pj3qo 4 года назад +4

      Alice Ignis i’m pretty sure its from the NZ movie the hobbit where the trolls say “everything tastes like chicken except chicken which taste like fish”

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 4 года назад +5

      i always hated that "tastes like chicken" label. Some reptiles can taste a _little_ like white meat bird like chickens, but even frogs legs (the most famous example) doesn't taste much like chicken, the meat is softer, moister, and has a little bit of a fresh water fish kind of flavor, the only thing they have in common is a similar texture and color.

  • @52flyingbicycles
    @52flyingbicycles 4 года назад +382

    “(Walnuts) are also not walls”
    *Plants vs Zombies wants to know your location*

  • @dandylionwine
    @dandylionwine 4 года назад +352

    You can tell how long the strawberry thing has been bothering Hank by how quickly this video turns from taxonomic clarification into exasperated pedantry.

    • @Ghorda9
      @Ghorda9 4 года назад +2

      it's also not the first video either.

    • @CartoonViolence6
      @CartoonViolence6 4 года назад +1

      But did you see the hair next to the fuzzies next to the center seed?

    • @KryssLaBryn
      @KryssLaBryn 4 года назад +17

      The thing about the name for strawberries (and walnuts) is that they're actually from the Anglo-Saxons (and thus far predate any kind of taxonomic classification that would consider them anything but a nut or berry, so one can't really get upset that a name that is around 1500 years old doesn't fit in well with classifications devised only in the last couple centuries). But "strawberries" originally meant something closer to "strewn berries", referring to the way they appear to be strewn across the ground. And "walnut" means "foreign nut"; they were imported, unlike more familiar nuts like hazelnuts. The "wal" that means "foreign" is the same word as the "wal" in "Wales". "Welsh" means "foreigners" in Anglo-Saxon, because that's what the native inhabitants (who ended up getting pushed west) that the Anglo-Saxons ran into were to them. Not Angles or Saxons or Jutes; therefore foreign. XD

    • @alisoncircus
      @alisoncircus 4 года назад +7

      @@KryssLaBryn I had heard that strawberries got the "straw" part from the fact that laying down straw under the plant keeps the fruit from getting moldy from contact with the ground - which I already had my doubts about because a) wild strawberries hold their fruit a good 2-5 inches above the ground, b) domestic strawberries are only a couple hundred years removed from wild ones, and they're only a few decades removed from the size and growth patterns of their ancestors, and c) I'm a lazy gardener, and none of the strawberries I ever grew ever seemed to require straw. Or benefit from it, either, since if you don't pick them on time they will mold, and if you let them sit in the dish too long they will mold. In fact whatever you do with them other than eat them, they will mold eventually, even with sugar and pectin added.
      So, too long, didn't read: thank you for an explanation that actually makes sense in the face of the evidence.

    • @vgil1278
      @vgil1278 4 года назад +2

      @@KryssLaBryn So interesting!

  • @tmutant
    @tmutant 4 года назад +133

    Peanut: Not a pea, or a nut. It is a legume, like peas, but not closely related.

    • @AstroTibs
      @AstroTibs 4 года назад +4

      The mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell

    • @ellevictor474
      @ellevictor474 4 года назад +4

      Coconut as well... It's not Coco or cocoa nor is it a nut🤣

    • @knightofcarrion7358
      @knightofcarrion7358 4 года назад +1

      yup, which is why everyone assumes if i eat peanut butter I will die. When that is no where near the case

    • @ayu8629
      @ayu8629 Год назад

      @@ellevictor474 It is coco though. It's the _nut_ of the _coco tree's_ fruit. Hence why mer de coco is a delicacy type of coco fruit with the nut of the coco fruit being, you guessed it, the coconut

    • @sydhenderson6753
      @sydhenderson6753 11 месяцев назад

      Raw peanuts do indeed taste like raw peas.

  • @glenngriffon8032
    @glenngriffon8032 4 года назад +270

    Are you telling me you don't think "Corpse Flower" is metal?

    • @cyanidejunkie
      @cyanidejunkie 4 года назад +11

      Sounds Metal AF to me... like a Metalocalypse song lol.

    • @leecrawford6560
      @leecrawford6560 4 года назад +3

      i would rock out/ jam to a/that song

    • @Onidotmoe
      @Onidotmoe 4 года назад +3

      It's not made of metal either

    • @glenngriffon8032
      @glenngriffon8032 4 года назад +5

      @@Onidotmoe it is metal. It is the blackest metal. The most brutal metal. Blacker then void beyond space, harder than a thousand diamonds.
      (and yes I know you meant metal as in a type of elemental crystal. I just wanted to do my best Nathan Explosion)

    • @glenngriffon8032
      @glenngriffon8032 4 года назад +3

      @@cyanidejunkie Brutal.

  • @krovek
    @krovek 4 года назад +26

    IIRC The "straw" in strawberry comes from the practice of covering the dirt in the strawberry patch with loose straw. The straw inhibits weed growth and the decomposition of the straw adds warmth, moisture and nutrients to the soil for the strawberry plants.

    • @SiqueScarface
      @SiqueScarface 4 года назад +2

      And that's why it is called Erdbeere ("earth berry") in German, because if you don't put straw around the berry, it lies on the bare earth.

  • @ThrottleKitty
    @ThrottleKitty 4 года назад +477

    Biologist 1: "What do we name this spikey lizard?
    Biologist 2: "Horny toad!"
    Biologist 1: "It's spiked, not horned, and it's not even a toad!"
    Biologist 2: **shrug**

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 4 года назад +15

      Sometimes the people naming things are giving too much power. The region I live in had almost everything named by the men on a single ship of explorers. They named nearly every mountain, harbor, sound, bay, major river, major island, major peninsula, or other distinguishing feature after themselves. There 2 cities, a valley, and a couple of islands that I can think of all named after the quarter master of the ship for example and there was even a peninsula that had to be renamed because they did a quick drive by and assumed it was an island. At one point people got kinda pissed that the captain Keating naming the biggest stuff after himself do the navigator got next dibs and ended up getting the actual biggest mountsin for 300+ miles named after himself (along with a city, a river, a valley, etc) and they started running low on names so they'd just half ass it and name places "mossy rock" and "green valley" or "rocky beach".

    • @Beryllahawk
      @Beryllahawk 4 года назад +3

      Having caught many a horny toad as a kid growing up in Western Texas - they act a bit like toads, and when you're in the desert there aren't many other frogs OR toads to compare the poor lizards to...so it's squatty shaped and it hops, it's a toad! Kid reasoning, of course. The fun challenge for me was always managing to capture one without getting poked AND without actually panicking the poor critter into squirting blood at me. Though at the time I thought the blood was some sort of venom! Definitely attributing fearsome traits to a relatively innocent creature, haha!

    • @RickySTT
      @RickySTT 4 года назад +6

      The archipelago I live on was named after an imaginary saint’s 11,000 (count ’em) imaginary bridesmaids. The person who named us was himself named after an imaginary saint. He was a genocidal butcher who got lost, so of course we honor him with a holiday tomorrow.

    • @glenngriffon8032
      @glenngriffon8032 4 года назад +2

      @@RickySTT Well come shake the hand of america and our columbus day, a day honoring a rapist who took and sold indigenous people into slavery, and made the claim that he discovered the continent in spite of the fact that thousands of people were already living here.

    • @Hunnter2k3
      @Hunnter2k3 4 года назад +1

      Biologist 2: Ultimate POWAH!

  • @dulcimerrafi
    @dulcimerrafi 4 года назад +55

    Guy 1: "This tastes like chicken."
    Guy 2: "If it tastes like chicken, then it's a chicken."

    • @Kartoffelkamm
      @Kartoffelkamm 4 года назад

      Guy 3: "Ok, I ran some tests, and apparently there are a lot of humans here."

    • @jenjung577
      @jenjung577 4 года назад +1

      Guy1:...
      Guy2:what

    • @aiko9393
      @aiko9393 3 года назад

      Everything tastes like chicken.

  • @TheTwick
    @TheTwick 4 года назад +172

    Yosemite Sam used to shout “GREAT HORNY TOADS”!

    • @AstroTibs
      @AstroTibs 4 года назад +2

      Especially when he got blood squirted on him

    • @LaGuerre19
      @LaGuerre19 4 года назад

      @@AstroTibs lmao

  • @Eric_D_6
    @Eric_D_6 4 года назад +34

    Now I just want to walk up to someone eating a strawberry and say, 'that's not a berry', then pull out a banana and say 'this is a berry'. lol

    • @jaschabull2365
      @jaschabull2365 4 года назад +6

      Bonus points if you say it in Crocodile Dundee's accent.

    • @LovelyAngel.
      @LovelyAngel. 4 года назад +3

      I would respond with "it's not a straw either"

  • @Flamingbob25
    @Flamingbob25 4 года назад +27

    me: Hey look its a snake
    a biologist: actually thats a legless lizard
    me: ... okay

  • @huldu
    @huldu 4 года назад +82

    Humans: these frogs will last forever they'll never go extinct!
    Fungus: hold my beer.

    • @itsmeblank4028
      @itsmeblank4028 4 года назад +1

      Sad but try

    • @anarchyantz1564
      @anarchyantz1564 4 года назад +2

      Well it does make a change from humans making them go extinct directly, though likely it was due to humans tracking the fungus over there in the first place.

    • @itsmeblank4028
      @itsmeblank4028 4 года назад +3

      @@anarchyantz1564 Humans are actually the reason if I correct the fungi orgininted in Asia, correct if I am wrong been the Internet that goes without saying

  • @rainbow_vader
    @rainbow_vader 4 года назад +51

    The mountain chicken: neither a mountain, nor a chicken

  • @MegaWolffreak22
    @MegaWolffreak22 4 года назад +199

    "Blindschleiche" actually translates to "blind sneaker (as in someone that sneaks everywhere instead of walking). No idea where you got the other translation it's always funny to hear those things as a native speaker and go "wait what thats not....that not what that means though." Happens so often xD

    • @josarah5033
      @josarah5033 4 года назад +4

      Thought so too😅
      The first part could maybe be that they thought it was 'blend' as in blenden instead of blind or maybe just thought it's the same as blind-ing, idk tho and even less about the second part lol

    • @josarah5033
      @josarah5033 4 года назад +14

      Also 'schleichen' are actually a class of animals and specifically reptiles so if not for the literal translation this doesn't make any sense either

    • @rdreher7380
      @rdreher7380 4 года назад +25

      Ok, it's hard to find more detailed information on this, but this one source might shed some light on this:
      tierdoku.com/index.php?title=Blindschleiche
      According to the source, "Blindschleiche" developed out of the Althochdeutsch term "Plintslicho" which did in fact mean "blendende Schleiche." If this is correct, it would suggest the idea of "Blind" is a folk etymology or reanalysis.
      Folk etymology or reanalysis refers to when the speakers of a language lose connection to what roots the word actually came from, and then start to think of it as coming from different ones. For example, in English we have the word "outrage," which derives from Old French "outrage" which came from earlier "oltrage," which in tern came from the vulgar Latin word "ultraticum," the root being Latin "ultra." However, most English speakers look at that word and think it is a combination of the words "out" and "rage."
      This kind of reanalyzing the components of a word can influence how it is pronounced, spelled, and understood, so in some ways the "folk" etymology of the word becomes intertwined with its real origins, so even if the idea of "plint/ bendende" is right, it might not be wrong to say "Blindschleiche" refers to "blind," since so many people would now understand it that way.
      Or perhaps it is just simply from "blind," and Hank and the scishow team got it wrong. I'd like to know what they read in the first place that suggested otherwise.

    • @jacktheripperVII
      @jacktheripperVII 4 года назад +1

      I Can confirm this comment

    • @Matty0311MMS
      @Matty0311MMS 4 года назад +19

      As a german I was confused as well, but I looked it up, before commenting, and Hank is right. The name comes from middle high german, and it really meant "shiny" not "blind". ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

  • @supersmily5811
    @supersmily5811 4 года назад +188

    WHOA WAIT A MINUTE. You gonna explain how a species recovered with 2 remaining individuals? That's well below the minimum for genetic diversity right?

    • @absalomdraconis
      @absalomdraconis 4 года назад +50

      Depends on the species, and you can always _try_ to force it with sheer raw numbers-per-generation, and besides, it's _less_ than 200 now, despite the harvest numbers previously being a thousand or more: has it _really_ recovered, or is it in intensive care? Because "permanent hunting ban" says "intensive care" to me.
      Incidentally, it's thought that the cheetahs were reduced to a single breeding female during the most recent ice age.

    • @supersmily5811
      @supersmily5811 4 года назад +14

      @@absalomdraconis Comparitively recovered. I'm not saying that the species isn't still critically endangered, obviously. However, there is no sheer numbers game you can play with genetic diversity. That's called imbreeding, and leads to far to many also obvious side-effects to be a viable strategy. By all accounts, these critters should be screwed.

    • @supersmily5811
      @supersmily5811 4 года назад +4

      @@absalomdraconis As for the cheetahs, I've not heard of this before, but without human intervention they wouldn't still be alive so it seems unlikely that they'd recover on their own from near-extinction during a debatably harsher time than the present.

    • @ZombieBarioth
      @ZombieBarioth 4 года назад +18

      @supersmily 5
      Actually there is. Did you know the cavendish banana, the one that's currently endangered, is basically all clones of one another? Genetic diversity itself is basically a numbers game.
      The issue with inbreeding is that you're relying on naturally occurring genetic mutations to pop up and rediversify on it's own. Its not actually bad until something goes wrong, namely a disease or harmful mutation catches on, in which case it can spread like wildfire.
      That's what is happening to the cavendish banana right now, a particular fungis is spreading.

    • @supersmily5811
      @supersmily5811 4 года назад +5

      @@ZombieBarioth Cloning doesn't count. While it can sustain a population, the banana clones aren't a viable populace as they would have been destroyed without being cloned and removed from the threat entirely. Clones create the same individual repeatedly rather than genetically diverse bodies, that's the point.

  • @2yearoldeastercandy935
    @2yearoldeastercandy935 4 года назад +5

    I absolutely love the origin of the milk snake’s common name. Some farmers thought these snakes where hanging around their cows cause they were stealing their milk. They eventually found out that the snakes were after mice not milk, but it was too late and the name stuck

    • @Catlily5
      @Catlily5 Год назад

      And I always assumed they were milky looking (though I never saw one).

  • @myrmatta1
    @myrmatta1 4 года назад +17

    "Elongated reptile" sounds like some kind of weird euphemism.

  • @mikaelkjericsson
    @mikaelkjericsson 4 года назад +16

    Well, top this. In Swedish, strawberry is called "jordgubbe", which translates roughly to "old dirt man" or "earth geezer".

    • @lightningbug6234
      @lightningbug6234 4 года назад

      I'd like to ask, ...why?

    • @kristianfagerstrom7011
      @kristianfagerstrom7011 4 года назад +3

      @@lightningbug6234 "gubbe" original meaning "small lump" - (regional dialect) Etymology 1841

    • @kristianfagerstrom7011
      @kristianfagerstrom7011 4 года назад +1

      @@lightningbug6234 "jord" - Earth / dirt - so small lump (that grows near) earth I guess - sounds a lot more accurate than strawberry :-)
      -but strawberry is a farmed version of "smultron" (looks like a tiny strawberry)
      Smultron - Fragaria vesca Strawberry - Fragaria × ananassa

  • @haroldsaxon1075
    @haroldsaxon1075 4 года назад +34

    Most common nuts aren't technically nuts. peanuts, pecans, cashews. None of them are nuts.

    • @Roomsaver
      @Roomsaver 4 года назад +3

      Walnuts, peanuts, pineapple smells. (Grapes, melons, oranges, and coconut shells. Ahh yeah!)

    • @vgil1278
      @vgil1278 4 года назад +1

      Why not cashews or pecans?

    • @joemother6200
      @joemother6200 4 года назад +2

      V Gil cashews are an accessory fruit, growing from the bottom of the cashew apple

    • @gingermcgingin1733
      @gingermcgingin1733 3 года назад +1

      Peanuts are actually a type of pea.

  • @JohnCena8351
    @JohnCena8351 4 года назад +8

    I love Hanks attempt to say "Blindschleiche" lol.

  • @seatbelttruck
    @seatbelttruck 4 года назад +5

    ...Since Giant Pandas are now classified as bears again, and Red Pandas are the only ones in their family, wouldn't they be the real pandas?

    • @davidwesley2525
      @davidwesley2525 2 года назад

      50 years ago Giant Pandas 🐼 were placed in the same Family as Raccoons.

    • @seatbelttruck
      @seatbelttruck 2 года назад +1

      ​@@davidwesley2525 I know. 50 years ago we couldn't sequence their DNA. When we did, we found out they were bears.

  • @briannaschultz7420
    @briannaschultz7420 4 года назад +11

    "They're also not walls I guess"
    *spits out rice*

  • @Midwest_Lizard_Mom
    @Midwest_Lizard_Mom Год назад +3

    I love how animated/clearly amused Hank is by the Mountain Chicken!

  • @fuzzymilk
    @fuzzymilk 4 года назад +50

    The name for slowworm over here would translate into copper lizard, I'd like to say that's a way nicer name for such a neat creature

    • @sleepingcity85
      @sleepingcity85 4 года назад

      @@eier3252 blind sneaky thing is not a real good translation after all. its "blind Anguidae". "blind sneak" would be translate to "Blindschleicher" which isnt quite correct either but comes close.

    • @kelzbelz313
      @kelzbelz313 4 года назад

      That’s a much more accurate name.

  • @sebastianelytron8450
    @sebastianelytron8450 4 года назад +139

    Speaking of terrible names, did you hear about the drummer who gave his daughters all the same name?
    Anna 1
    Anna 2
    Anna 3
    Anna 4

    • @dandylionwine
      @dandylionwine 4 года назад +23

      *ba-dum-TSH*

    • @fireandcopper
      @fireandcopper 4 года назад +3

      Wahh wahhhh

    • @daniellezepess
      @daniellezepess 4 года назад +2

      LOL

    • @monroerobbins7551
      @monroerobbins7551 4 года назад +2

      DAMN IT. I’m not mad, perfect timing, perfect setting, but somehow I’m still mad.

    • @LmaoMoni
      @LmaoMoni 4 года назад +5

      Thats unironically how ancient greeks named their kids

  • @gartengeflugel924
    @gartengeflugel924 4 года назад +23

    About the walnuts: we at least learned in university that by the latest definition walnuts are actual nuts. All three layers of the pericarp are hard and woody and the fleshy, fibrous part around it is actually formed from the base of the fruit, not from the fruit itself (similar to apple type fruits).

    • @juancarloszamorasenoret9040
      @juancarloszamorasenoret9040 4 года назад +1

      Neither the three layers of the fruit in Juglans are hard and woody, nor the fruit is indehiscent as it should be in a nut. It is better called a tryma than a drupe, though.

    • @RickySTT
      @RickySTT 4 года назад +7

      With so many of my favorite nuts being declared “not nuts,” I’ve decided that if it looks like a nut, tastes like a nut, and crunches like a nut, I’m going to call it a nut. (Likewise, Hank will not change what he puts in his berry muffins.)

  • @OakenTome
    @OakenTome 4 года назад +23

    Common names can be the bane of a tarantula enthusiast’s existence. There are several species referred to as “Mexican Red Knee” or “Mexican Fire Leg”.
    Considering how many of these species there are, and how different they can be, this can cause an unnecessary amount of confusion among those that are maybe not reliant or knowledge on scientific names as they should be.

    • @SpiderdayNightLive
      @SpiderdayNightLive 4 года назад +4

      what does this tarantula eat?"
      "Mostly bugs, small lizards, maybe some mice."
      If we put it a tiny bird in front of it, would the spider eat it?
      "I mean, maybe but the bird would just... fly.. away first"
      BIRD-EATER TARANTULA IT IS

    • @Xenesthis741
      @Xenesthis741 4 года назад +3

      lets call the oldworld tarantulas Earth Tigers !!

    • @lucasbeck1391
      @lucasbeck1391 4 года назад +2

      @@SpiderdayNightLive BIRD-SPIDER

    • @suelane3628
      @suelane3628 Год назад

      I wasn't so bothered about the names as I was clearing rubbish and opened a mysterious tin. Inside there are two large hairy spider skins/sloughs! What is worrying I don't even remember how they came into my possession.

  • @DeRien8
    @DeRien8 4 года назад +15

    7:40, couldn't pull that fast one on me. I have cats! I know that tail twitch means pooping!

    • @light-master
      @light-master 4 года назад +4

      Was just about to comment that too.
      Dogs do that as well, or at least mine does. She also thinks that she's a 60 lb lap dog, so not sure she's got all her marbles anyways, lol.

    • @snowball_from_earth
      @snowball_from_earth 4 года назад +1

      Same. I wonder if that was done on purpose...

    • @vgil1278
      @vgil1278 4 года назад +2

      DeRien8
      Can't get any privacy. Now he's on RUclips!

  • @sls8830
    @sls8830 4 года назад +11

    Peanuts also not a nut but people allergic to tree nuts are often also allergic to walnuts and peanuts.

    • @Agaettis
      @Agaettis 4 года назад +2

      Uep, peanuts are legumes which puts them in the bean family

    • @kelzbelz313
      @kelzbelz313 4 года назад +1

      Yep, some people with severe peanut allergy need to use caution when eating vegan protein powders because they use pea protein isolate (anther legume) which can sometime trigger an allergy.

  • @robertross2164
    @robertross2164 4 года назад +5

    "Its not a snake it's A legless lizard." And thats how we get good t-shirt memes

  • @chaffejcarraway
    @chaffejcarraway 4 года назад +3

    Thanks guys, some of those names have been be crux of my deep hidden pain for many years. You have helped begun the process of healing.

  • @loganl3746
    @loganl3746 4 года назад +7

    Finally some botany! And my boy Amorphophallus!
    For more botanical misnomers, how about Liriodendron tulipifera? Common names include Tulip tree (not a Tulip) and Tulip Poplar (not a Poplar), and the Latin name means "lily tree" (not a Lily). The flowers it makes do look like tulips, I'll admit.
    Also lol is that red panda pooping at 7:45?

  • @That-Google-Guy
    @That-Google-Guy 4 года назад +10

    12:22 LMAO “nutty-tasting droop” had me dying!

  • @Matticitt
    @Matticitt 4 года назад +7

    7:38 well, I sure did not expect to watch red not-panda pooping today but here I am.

  • @Aeturnalis
    @Aeturnalis 4 года назад +2

    Blindschleiche means something like "blind slither." The word for snake is Schlange, shining/shiny is glänzend, so shiny snake would be something like Glänzschlange or glänzende Schlange.

  • @terryturley7473
    @terryturley7473 4 года назад +10

    Does a Red Panda take a dump in the woods?
    I guess so 7:40.

    • @JamesDavy2009
      @JamesDavy2009 4 года назад +1

      They also don't sing death metal unless they're on Netflix.

    • @jimbrewer498
      @jimbrewer498 4 года назад +1

      You noticed that too?

  • @TheGr8FryingPan
    @TheGr8FryingPan 4 года назад +60

    Just so ya know, the german name for slowworm 'blindschleiche' really doesnt translate to shining snake in any way :P. It means blind crawler or sneaker :)

    • @prunabluepepper
      @prunabluepepper 4 года назад +1

      Ja, i really wonder how he ended up with that mistake. Seltsam.

    • @annabeinglazy5580
      @annabeinglazy5580 4 года назад +5

      exactly what I was thinking :D I never thought of themas "shining snakes" when the literal translation is "blind sneaking thing" ... nothing shiny about that

    • @galli0
      @galli0 4 года назад +9

      Could it be a blinding snake? As in its shiny so its blinding you? atleast in norwegian blind is the same, but 'blindene' means something is bright enough to blind you, and if its so shiny maybe the sun get caught in it and it blinds you.. idk just a linguistic leap i guess

    • @Roomsaver
      @Roomsaver 4 года назад

      @@galli0 Could've been a typo when translating it

    • @snowball_from_earth
      @snowball_from_earth 4 года назад +2

      The German name changed just like the English one. Originally it did mean shining "schleiche", but now it just sounds like blind sneaker. He was technically correct, but he should have compared that translation to the original English name, not the modern one.

  • @doggfite
    @doggfite 4 года назад +7

    According to one of the researchers at the Hogle Zoo in Utah, who have a mating pair of Red Pandas, "Panda" means "bamboo eater" in mandarin, this their name, not just because the eat bamboo like "real" pandas, but because that's just what the word means.

    • @PorpoiseInATent
      @PorpoiseInATent 4 года назад +4

      also they were "dicovered" like 50 years before giant pandas

    • @KellyClowers
      @KellyClowers 4 года назад +4

      My understanding is that we don't know for sure where the term panda came from, though it could be a corruption of the second part of nigálya-pónya, a local Tibetan name. Regardless, red pandas have the priority claim on the name, as someone else mentioned they were given the name panda by westerners many years before we encountered the giant panda

  • @yonabelle8938
    @yonabelle8938 4 года назад +2

    As a person who lives in the Caribbean, no insult to you or your editor, it was simply hilarious hearing how you pronounced "Montserrat" and "Dominica".
    Thanks for the good laugh.

  • @axiomostanes
    @axiomostanes 4 года назад +9

    "Also not walls"
    *Plants vs Zombies wants to know your location*

  • @Mamolox
    @Mamolox 4 года назад +22

    The dutch word for leopard is “luipaard”. “Lui” means lazy and “paard” means horse so i guess that makes it a lazy horse.

    • @DARIO4Cq
      @DARIO4Cq 4 года назад +8

      False etymology actually. The origin of the word is traced to Latin leo "lion" and pardus, possibly "panther". So it would mean a lion-panther and by borrowing into Dutch it ended up with the same sounds as "lui" and "paard". :)

    • @Mamolox
      @Mamolox 4 года назад +2

      @@DARIO4Cq yeah I know I didn't mean it that way. Thought it's pretty funny anyway but thanks for making that clear :)

  • @VeryLastIfried
    @VeryLastIfried 4 года назад +3

    I could be wrong on this, but as a German speaker and a herpetologist I think that "Schleiche" is never used in the context of a snake. Today at least every common name I know that includes "Schleiche" describes a lizard (often legless but not necessarily). It is absolutely possible though that the word originates as a term used for snakes. At least today though the German name is not terrible anymore. (=

  • @asiburger
    @asiburger 4 года назад +35

    Wait. Blindschleiche comes from "blendend" as in shining (or blending)? I thought it came, for what ever reason, from "blind" which just means blind. Like.. blind stalker. Though they aren't blind, are they?

    • @kourii
      @kourii 4 года назад +12

      Yeah no I think Hank is mistaken on this one. I think they were called 'blind' because of their tiny eyes. They can also be called 'blindworms' in English

    • @mugginsthejinx1037
      @mugginsthejinx1037 4 года назад +4

      Yeah. I grew up in Germany and the other kids called me a Blindschleiche because I had really strong glasses 🤓

    • @asiburger
      @asiburger 4 года назад +1

      @@mugginsthejinx1037 well, guess I was one of said kids. :D

    • @annabeinglazy5580
      @annabeinglazy5580 4 года назад

      if it ever came from anything other than "blind", it has lost that meaning a long time ago. As Muggins The Jinx said, it can also be used as a derogatory term for someone who does not see well, so the association with being "blind" has obviously stuck.

    • @rdreher7380
      @rdreher7380 4 года назад +1

      Ok, it's hard to find more detailed information on this, but this one source might shed some light on this:
      tierdoku.com/index.php?title=Blindschleiche
      According to the source, "Blindschleiche" developed out of the Althochdeutsch term "Plintslicho" which did in fact mean "blendende Schleiche." If this is correct, it would suggest the idea of "Blind" is a folk etymology or reanalysis.
      Folk etymology or reanalysis refers to when the speakers of a language lose connection to what roots the word actually came from, and then start to think of it as coming from different ones. For example, in English we have the word "outrage," which derives from Old French "outrage" which came from earlier "oltrage," which in tern came from the vulgar Latin word "ultraticum," the root being Latin "ultra." However, most English speakers look at that word and think it is a combination of the words "out" and "rage."
      This kind of reanalyzing the components of a word can influence how it is pronounced, spelled, and understood, so in some ways the "folk" etymology of the word becomes intertwined with its real origins, so even if the idea of "plint/ bendende" is write, it might not be wrong to say "Blindschleiche" refers to "blind," since so many people would now understand it that way.
      Or perhaps it is just simply from "blind," and Hank and the scishow team got it wrong. I'd like to know what they read in the first place that suggested otherwise.

  • @RickySTT
    @RickySTT 4 года назад +5

    Knowledge is knowing that tomatoes are fruits. Wisdom is not putting them in a fruit salad.

    • @metamorphicorder
      @metamorphicorder 4 года назад

      Actually SOME tomatoes are perfectly fine to include in a fruit salad. Just like some strawberries are perfect to include in a mixed greens sald.

    • @RickySTT
      @RickySTT 4 года назад

      I just printed an ‘R’ in a graphics program, flipped it, and rotated it.

  • @stephenbenner4353
    @stephenbenner4353 4 года назад +5

    Of course the mountain chicken tastes like chicken. As we know, everything taste like chicken.

    • @jimbrewer498
      @jimbrewer498 4 года назад

      Except chicken after McDonald's gets a hold of it.

  • @unicornswag888
    @unicornswag888 4 года назад +12

    *I think my name is pretty accurate.*

    • @likebot.
      @likebot. 4 года назад +3

      Speaking of terrible names, you aren't even _the_ muscle hank :(
      But hi anyway.

    • @wdalts
      @wdalts 4 года назад +2

      Even your words have muscles

  • @illiengalene2285
    @illiengalene2285 4 года назад +30

    Blindschleiche doesn't mean shiny snakes it means blinding sneaker, close, but not good translated. Sorry
    I'm native German and study their habitats and population for NABU.

    • @gideonshandy4543
      @gideonshandy4543 4 года назад

      Sneaky Blinders?

    • @illiengalene2285
      @illiengalene2285 4 года назад +2

      @@gideonshandy4543 schleichen= to sneak/creep/tiptoe/lurk (moving silently)
      "Blind" from 'blenden'=blinding (making someone unable to see).
      So in order from the name

    • @daskalospapas1883
      @daskalospapas1883 4 года назад

      Deine Übersetzung ist näher dran, aber dennoch falsch. Deine Übersetzung würde bedeuten, dass es blendende Schleiche heisst.

    • @illiengalene2285
      @illiengalene2285 4 года назад +2

      @@daskalospapas1883 das ist der Ursprung des Namens, ja. Bzw Blendender Schleicher.
      Was durch Verschleifung passierte.
      《Die Verschleifung, auch Enklise (griech. égklisis, ,das Hinneigen‘) ist ein Phänomen der gesprochenen Sprache bei dem zwei Wörter zu einem Wort verkürzt werden.》
      《Der deutsche Name wird aber auf das Althochdeutsche plintslîchozurückgeführt, was nach allgemeiner Auffassung soviel wie „blendender/blinkender Schleicher“ bedeutet und sich auf das Glänzen der glatten Schuppenhaut sowie die typische Fortbewegung beziehen dürfte. 》

    • @snowball_from_earth
      @snowball_from_earth 4 года назад

      Because they are shiny they are blinding.

  • @captainrobots1
    @captainrobots1 4 года назад +6

    I collected fresh walnuts
    Just over 2 weeks ago.
    Also a good stain.

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican 4 года назад +15

    In Russia the legless lizards are called Sheltopusik (yellow-bellied) which is a better sounding name for it

    • @cuba6959
      @cuba6959 4 года назад

      que pinga

    • @alextheaxolotl3031
      @alextheaxolotl3031 4 года назад

      Avery the Cuban-American but that’s a different species and that is its scientific name where as the slow worm is just its common name

  • @absalomdraconis
    @absalomdraconis 4 года назад +6

    Well Hank, it's like this: _eventually you have to throw all the scientists in jail for trying to redefine nuts._ I'll give them peanuts (not a nut at _all_ ), and even cashews, but walnuts have been nuts _longer_ than scientists have been claiming otherwise, _so the scientists are wrong._ If they want a word for their category that includes some nuts but not walnuts or pecans, then they can go invent a new one, because "nut" is already allocated to the _contrary_ of their desires.

    • @kevinwells9751
      @kevinwells9751 4 года назад +4

      I don't mind there being a difference between the culinary and scientific uses of words. I don't mind tomatoes being biologically a fruit and culinarily a vegetable, and I don't mind a peanut being biologically a legume and culinarily a nut. Yes, it is sometimes better for scientists to come up with a new word to describe a category in order to be less confusing, but in the end it doesn't really matter as long as people keep context in mind

  • @NK-..
    @NK-.. 4 года назад +2

    I think Hank had way too much fun with this one! Love it!

  • @andrewstrongman305
    @andrewstrongman305 4 года назад +5

    Australia's Thorny Devil is a little lizard that looks like it would hurt to touch it, but I caught one once and the 'spines' are quite soft. Don't worry I released it unharmed.

    • @MossyQuartz
      @MossyQuartz 4 года назад +3

      In the 1960's we still could find "horned-toads" where I grew up, but I was too young to know anything about blood squirting or lizard tails. I was so charmed by how adorable the spike-covered lizard looked as it sunned itself behind our house, I knelt next to it and wrapped my little-kid hands around its soft flat tummy and picked it up and admired its tiny face. I put it down again after I finished admiring it. It didn't squirt blood at me and it didn't swing its head to poke me or any of that. Maybe it was a mellow critter; I don't know. Twenty years later, I read that they were endangered in that valley. I never saw any in the wild in the Los Angeles area after 1970.

    • @jaschabull2365
      @jaschabull2365 4 года назад +1

      You mean thorny devils? Those prickly-looking lizards that eat lots of ants?

    • @andrewstrongman305
      @andrewstrongman305 4 года назад

      @@jaschabull2365 I'm not sure how I mixed up the name, thanks for letting me know. :)

    • @jaschabull2365
      @jaschabull2365 4 года назад +1

      @@andrewstrongman305
      It very well might be called that by others, common names can get pretty diverse (especially for things like cougars or isopods)

    • @andrewstrongman305
      @andrewstrongman305 4 года назад

      @@jaschabull2365 Yes, those "spines" are for show, they are actually soft to touch. The lizard itself isn't covered in hard scales either. They depend on bluff and speed for protection.

  • @Beryllahawk
    @Beryllahawk 4 года назад +2

    Happy to say I did know about walnuts as drupes already (thanks Good Eats) - as walnuts share that with, for instance, pecans. Drupes are interesting!
    I wonder if y'all might - eventually - do a video looking into how the idea of "beans" has changed over time? I've been doing a bit of reading and am fascinated by how - for European cookery - the "bean" discussed in the 15th Century is not at all the same plant as the one discussed in the 19th Century. But I have yet to find some good information as to WHY that change took place, and whether or not it's been true of other crops, or other cultures. Was it simply because plants brought in from colonies were so much better somehow? Was there something wrong with the original bean crop? (Which apparently, were once just "beans" or possibly referred to as "broad beans" and now are "fava beans"...)
    It just seems like there's more to learn here than what I've dug up on my own and it interests me. :)

  • @oldrabbit8290
    @oldrabbit8290 4 года назад +7

    and here i am, hoping that the "horny" toad may have some weird way of reproduction to live up to its name..

  • @MalcolmCooks
    @MalcolmCooks 4 года назад +2

    I also have an amorphophallus titanum

  • @k.f4525
    @k.f4525 4 года назад +6

    The German word for turtle is "Schildkröte" which translates to "shield toad" and I think that's beautiful

  • @EveryDayALittleDeath
    @EveryDayALittleDeath 4 года назад +1

    "Walnuts aren't nuts"
    Me, someone with a deathly tree nut allergy: Why do they make me need my epipen, then? I'm not allergic to anything else.

    • @pepesylvia848
      @pepesylvia848 3 года назад

      Because you're allergic to them.

  • @thanrose
    @thanrose 4 года назад +4

    Binomial nomenclature. Learn it, love it, get the T-shirt.

    • @Keallei
      @Keallei 4 года назад

      thanrose
      Binomial nomenclature, or nom nom for short.

  • @somnambulnation5681
    @somnambulnation5681 4 года назад

    The phrase, "Nutty-tasting Drupe" made my day! I will now strive to make this phrase ubiquitous. Thanks!

  • @OpEditorial
    @OpEditorial 4 года назад +17

    Can we also admit (while we're on the subject) that "drupe" is also a pretty awful description particularly for something associated with nuts 🤔

  • @arkady714
    @arkady714 4 года назад +1

    In both the previous video and this one, you guys forgot "prairie dogs!"

  • @tzwacdastag8223
    @tzwacdastag8223 4 года назад +4

    If a frog can be called a chicken, can a chicken be also called a frog

  • @LeatherNeck1833
    @LeatherNeck1833 4 года назад

    Thanks for showing the Red Panda pooping 7:38! So much for eating while watching your show.

  • @sussekind9717
    @sussekind9717 4 года назад +4

    Blind scheiche doesn't mean shining snake in German. It means blind slither. This is obviously because they are virtually blind and slither.
    Please recheck your sources.
    Also, a fun fact, the "straw" part of strawberry used to actually be strewberry. Because the berries were strewn amongst the leaves.

    • @Faselbob
      @Faselbob 4 года назад

      Says the guy who could do a quick Google search to see blind doesn't come from the German word Blind and they're also not blind.

    • @kourii
      @kourii 4 года назад

      The 'straw' part of 'straw' also comes from 'strew', because straw is strewn about.

    • @sussekind9717
      @sussekind9717 4 года назад

      @@Faselbob I never said they were blind, I said virtually blind, as they have poor eyesight. Secondly, did you even look at my name? I am German. I require no Google searches.

    • @Faselbob
      @Faselbob 4 года назад

      @@sussekind9717 apparently you do require a Google search as it would have told you that the blind part derives from old German and not modern German and does not mean blind...

    • @sussekind9717
      @sussekind9717 4 года назад

      @@Faselbob You keep telling me I'm wrong, but you are unable to explain how I'm wrong. Please explain what it means.

  • @abbieq11
    @abbieq11 4 года назад +2

    “Walnuts aren’t walls, either, I guess”
    good observation. are you sure?

  • @professorpancakes6545
    @professorpancakes6545 4 года назад +5

    So that's why they call bats "chicken of the cave"

  • @jesseburton4997
    @jesseburton4997 3 года назад

    Made my day at the end when the frog picture pops up as he says " the mountain chicken " haha dang

  • @davidbuschhorn6539
    @davidbuschhorn6539 4 года назад +3

    "Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever"
    Not a problem west of the Mississippi. :) It's an east coast disease.

    • @TerrariaGolem
      @TerrariaGolem 4 года назад +1

      *I live in New Jersey*
      :o

    • @anarchyantz1564
      @anarchyantz1564 4 года назад

      @@TerrariaGolem Thank you Oath and welcome to the New Jersey anonymous group. Remember all, admitting you live in New Jersey is the first step towards leading a normal life!

    • @TerrariaGolem
      @TerrariaGolem 4 года назад +1

      @@anarchyantz1564 I cry... Florida Man could never beat New Jersey Man.
      That man memes from the shadows.

    • @anarchyantz1564
      @anarchyantz1564 4 года назад

      @@TerrariaGolem I genuinely laughed out loud at that!

  • @ogcurly6256
    @ogcurly6256 3 года назад

    Every time I watch a scishow episode, I always breathe a sigh of relief when I see Hank as the host

  • @thecoffeegod
    @thecoffeegod 4 года назад +12

    Terrible names for living things?
    You should talk to my ex.

  • @stoneylonesome7
    @stoneylonesome7 4 года назад

    The corspe flower is awesome! You guys should do a list of the top ten (or however many) biggest flowers in the world, I attempted a search for a video like that on RUclips and found very little.

  • @Mariechenabsent
    @Mariechenabsent 4 года назад +4

    Blindschleiche actually also translates to blind sneaker (from sneaking, not the shoe), not shining snake... Also that pronunciation was really off, Hank, sorry 😂

    • @DAYBROK3
      @DAYBROK3 4 года назад

      Mariechenabsent the word for snake is wourm isn’t it?

    • @Mariechenabsent
      @Mariechenabsent 4 года назад

      ​@@DAYBROK3 No, snake actually translates to "Schlange". The English word for worm is almost the same in German, it is "Wurm". The used word of "Schleiche" is a term from the nomenclature of lizards and very uncommon, as it just refers to the ones without limbs - so the term is very confusing, but accurate .. except for the blindness bit 😂

  • @p1ll
    @p1ll 4 года назад +1

    Excellent video . Thank you !

  • @beastlydookie81
    @beastlydookie81 4 года назад +12

    Like most rappers these days

  • @nmheath03
    @nmheath03 4 года назад +2

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't the red panda discovered first? So "panda" is a bad name for the bear, not the raccoon-esque panda

  • @Dark23KnightGames
    @Dark23KnightGames 4 года назад +4

    Another: “Bony-eared assfish” which isn’t a fish, it’s actually a kind of cusk-eel

  • @bazookallamaproductions5280
    @bazookallamaproductions5280 4 года назад +2

    ladybugs are bugs? nope.
    fireflies are flies? nope.
    beetles.

    • @jaschabull2365
      @jaschabull2365 4 года назад

      Not to mention, they are neither birds, nor worms.

  • @dvklaveren
    @dvklaveren 4 года назад +13

    TLDR: Scientific definitions came after language developed, so most definitions in science don't agree with the language they are based on. So, really, it's scientists who couldn't be original. :P

  • @Bombay1618
    @Bombay1618 4 года назад +1

    Sci-Show does Coffee Talk
    "I'll give you a topic. A _____ ________ is neither a ____ nor a ______. Talk amongst yaweleves!"

  • @michaelsoeffing3131
    @michaelsoeffing3131 4 года назад +3

    you pronounce dominica like dom-in-eek-ah, really stress the second i

  • @DelphiaStrickland
    @DelphiaStrickland 4 года назад +1

    Hank is my favorite! So animated and entertaining!!

  • @freedapeeple4049
    @freedapeeple4049 4 года назад

    The Mongols wore silk shirts because arrows would not pierce the silk, so when they were shot the silk wrapped around the arrowhead and they could pull the arrows out without doing more damage.

  • @jacklynhanson8499
    @jacklynhanson8499 4 года назад

    Black walnuts grew wild around my childhood home. For fun, we would pick them up and make tossing games from them. Still love the smell!

  • @danagibbs3265
    @danagibbs3265 4 года назад

    Walnuts in the woods are dangerous. I've slipped on those little green tennis balls a few times

  • @chillsahoy2640
    @chillsahoy2640 4 года назад +1

    Oh silk worms! They're adorable, and when I was a child growing up in Spain in the 2000s, it became a fad to keep silk worms as pets (at least in Valencia?). Keep them for a few generations and you might start to see some interesting mutations crop up.

  • @girlwiththegami9046
    @girlwiththegami9046 3 года назад

    You had me at MOUNTAIN CHICKEN!!! Laughing for years!

  • @IsaoSoichiro
    @IsaoSoichiro 11 месяцев назад

    Saying red pandas have special features made my brain immediately go to describing a car, a phone, or something for some reason haha

  • @OLLIE8425
    @OLLIE8425 4 года назад

    Hank: “Walnuts are not walls”
    PvZ Wall-nut: “Am I a joke to you?”

  • @KitsukiiPlays
    @KitsukiiPlays 4 года назад +2

    “Horny toad” seems pretty cool, I’ll google i-NOOOOOOOOOO

  • @jelfishery
    @jelfishery 4 года назад

    Just from "Mountain Chicken", I can tell this is going to be *hilarious*

  • @TheBalloonFish
    @TheBalloonFish 4 года назад +1

    The slowworm is known in Sweden as ”kopparorm” or ”kopparödla”, which literally translates to ”copper snake/lizard”!

  • @jimbrewer498
    @jimbrewer498 4 года назад

    I grew up in Illinois where the walnut tree abounds, we also had chestnut, hickory and just about any other nut (or drupe) you could imagine. Harvesting and preparing the walnuts was hard, you have to peel off that thick outer covering, which is not soft at all to prepare each individual "drupe" for drying or roasting. We'd do this every fall when I was growing up, the reward was worth it though especially come winter when we'd shovel the chestnuts into the fireplace and listen to them pop and sputter then eating them while they were still warm.

  • @1234kalmar
    @1234kalmar 4 года назад +1

    Serpeintine dragons, also known as noodle dergs

  • @rheiagreenland4714
    @rheiagreenland4714 3 года назад

    The fact that there is a plant out there whose Latin name translates to, "Giant Penis," has made my day.

  • @masterimbecile
    @masterimbecile 4 года назад +1

    In Taiwan we call frogs "field chickens" (田雞, tian2 ji1), and these field chickens are commonly eaten.
    We also call someone who wears glasses a "four-year frog" (四眼田雞, sir yan3 tian2 ji1). It is generally a derogatory term, although people have taken to use it as an affectionate nickname as well.

    • @jimbrewer498
      @jimbrewer498 4 года назад

      The Chinese will eat anything with 4 legs, except perhaps a table.