@@jujucasar2003 Some people actually believe that. But hey, genius of Thales was he measured the height of pyramid from trig alone. Now what if you are stranded?
I mean.. sure. But at the same time they have, presumably, 5th graders on the show who do answer every question as well and they use their answers at times, as you know. Every question asked has to be answerable by a 5th grader. In that respect i do see it as being smarter than a 5th grader
@@MaGiCFanz12 It's things they teach you up to 5th grade. Like anything else you lose it if you don't use it. Most these questions look like something that would be on a test that you would only remember if you had to study the subject that week.
That's because it's a linguistic term, not a mathematics term. In linguistics, st/nd/rd words ("first", "second", "third", etc.) are called ordinals, in contrast to cardinals. Actually, "cardinal number" does exist in set theory as a way to describe the size of a set, but I assume that's too advanced for this show.
The question how many adjectives was wrong. It is not two . It is 4. A type of adjective is an "article". An aticle is an adjective and the only articles are "a" and "The". I know this, I am in six grade. Adjectives answer questions such as "Which?". Which dog? It is THE dog and same thing applies to the other "the"
I'm an American, and whenever I watch the American version of this, I feel so smug, as I know so many answers. Watching this really humbles me, and makes me with I could learn more. Edit: Why nursury rymes? I guess that's culture. That is part of learning. So far, I've only the known the adjective question and the pokemon one (oddly since I don't watch the show).
MrBagginsEsq: Nursery rhymes is basically the Trick Question Category. Almost no adult will remember them unless they're parents. In Sweden, we just have the category "Music". If it's 1st to 2nd grade music, it'll undoubtedly be a nursery rhyme or children's song and almost no one ever gets it right.
I didn't know what a cardinal number was I had guessed double, but it turns out to be any number you count with (same as positive integers and natural numbers?). I think its related to sets and stuff. Ordinal numbers are like 1st, 2nd, 3rd and so on.
dinbri Cardinal numbers : 1,2,3,4 ......20, 35 etc. Ordinal numbers : 1st, 2nd,3rd,4th, 48th, 99th etc. In fact you use them everyday without knowing what they are.
Kevin Howard Not exactly . 0 to 9 are figures. With these figures you can form numbers. It is like the difference between letters and words. Consider figures to be letters in maths and numbers to be words. So of course you have words with one letters and you have numbers with one figure. Cardinal numbers are : 1, 2,3,4, never stop you can always ad 1. Ordinal numbers ( because they show an order) are : 1st,2nd,3rd,4th, 28th,59th etc.
Cardinal numbers are numbers that tell you how many of something there are (1, 2 ,3, 4...), and "first", "second", "third", etc... are expressing the ORDER of something
Pluto IS still a planet, we just have more classes of planets. We have terrestrial (rocky) planets, gas giants, ice giants and dwarf planets. Pluto was not "demoted" or downgraded. It was reclassified.
Newmaidumosa I have to ask if YOU are kidding. Do you not even know word definitions? I copied this DIRECTLY from the Webster's dictionary page for the definition of "butter" : a solid yellow substance made from milk or cream that is spread on food or used in cooking : a food made from cooked fruit or roasted nuts that have been ground up Peanut butter qualifies as "butter" under the second definition That leaves you in error with the example you used. Peanut butter IS in fact butter. In the same way Pluto is a TYPE of planet. It has "planet" right in the name there. Actually, yes, the Attorney General IS a General. In this context "general" means "leader". Word have more than one meaning, they are not always used in their most common context. Sometimes they have more general (there's that word again) meaning. Such as the terms "legally drunk" or "legally blind". That which is legal usually means that it is NOT illegal. For example, you can legally drive your car on the street. To legally drive you need to have a license or permit that proves to the State that you have demonstrated a set standard of competence for driving. You can't be illegally drunk, or illegally blind. To be "legally blind" your visual aquity needs to be below a standard set by the state. To be legally drunk your level of intoxication must be OVER a limit set by the state.
Newmaidumosa How can you type the letters, in order p, l, a, n, e, t and then say it is not a planet? I don't understand that. these letter LITERALLY spell out the word "PLANET" A grizzly bear and a black bear are both different animals, but they ARE both bears. Pluto was not demoted or downgraded. It was RECLASSIFIED. I just wish you can tell me how you can type out the letters p, l, a, n, e, t then say "not a planet."
Eric Taylor: I'd suggest you look up the definition of the word planet. Or just read the Wikipedia article on it. The term planet is specific and does not include dwarf planets. Our solar system has 8 planets by the scentific AND lexical definitions of the word "planet". And for good measure, peanut butter is, by definition, not butter, it's a paste, just like how jaffa cakes are not cakes, but biscuits and strawberries aren't actually berries.
Philip Wester Is Pluto a type of "planet"? Yes it is a DWARF PLANET. Earth Venus Mercury and Mars are TERRESTRIAL PLANETS Jupiter and Saturn are GAS GIANT PLANETS Neptune and Uranus are ICE GIANT PLANETS. By your definition extra solar planets are not planets, they do not orbit the sun. This is pasted directly from Webster's page on "butter" Full Definition of BUTTER 1 : a solid emulsion of fat globules, air, and water made by churning milk or cream and used as food 2 : a buttery substance: as a : any of various fatty oils remaining nearly solid at ordinary temperatures b : a creamy food spread; especially : one made of ground roasted nuts Definition 2b counts peanut butter AS BUTTER. Here's the link to that page. www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/butter
12:38 me walking out from my final exam, trying to think of that answer during the exam and when I walk out from the examination hall , the answer just came into my mind hahahahahaha
I am guessing this is the Australia version for at first I was thinking European. They did not use fiat euros as payment and this was fiat dollars. I just wish that either some game show contestants when asked a question like "What would you do with the money" would say an answer like. "Fiat dollars are not money for they are not a store of value which is required for an item to be that of money like gold or silver."
I know that it was originally and Australian TV show, but it is the Australian version. Like how we have X factor and the Voice, there is the US version of them shows even though they are the original...
FordFalcon1962nBlue I can't think of Neptune as the last planet. If someone asked me what the last planet was on a show like this I'd probably say Neptune, but I will also feel that Pluto is the last planet.
FordFalcon1962nBlue: Pluto was discovered in 1930, less than 100 years ago. They changed its classification because its classification has always been shaky and they just discovered way too many things about Pluto that made it a not-planet than what makes it a planet. Also, Pluto isn't even the biggest dwarf planet in our solar system. That honour goes to Eris. If you're gonna count Pluto as a planet, we actually have 10 planets. Classifying Pluto as a planet simply due to tradition is stupid.
I was breezing through this until they got to the Aboriginal Rugby Union player. You could ask every 5th grader in America that question and you'd never get a correct answer.
Well that's true, because the answer is wrong. The first Aboriginal to captain an Australian side, if we ignore the all-indigenous 1868 cricket team (not considered an official representative team) was Arthur Beetson for the Rugby League Kangaroos in 1973. They're right that it was Rugby, but wrong that it was the professional, not the amateur, code that got there first.
@@cygil1Interesting. I had forgotten Artie, which is a bit sad as I was a great supporter of Easts when he was their captain. I knew about the Ella brothers in Rugby. Hopefully I would have got Artie if they had got the question right and had put Arthur.
Oh dear I am very sad most of them didn’t know the surname of Mark, the first Aboriginal Australian, to captain an Australian team. I am not into sport, but back in the day Mark and his brothers were well known, at least in NSW and Queensland. I am not sure where Brett is from - he can have a pass if he from one of the other states.
Bouncing is an adjective. This is because it is describing ball. What kind of ball? A bouncing ball. Ran is the verb in this sentence, since it is telling what the dog does. If you were to label the main sentence parts, "dog" would be your simple subject; "ran" would be your simple predicate; "quickly" would be an adverb telling how the dog ran; and "after the bouncing red ball" would be a prepositional phrase.
ok but someone tell me where i can watch all the episodes of this show? i cant find it anywhere.. there was an episode with the wrestler The Big Show, can not find any trace of it on the internet. Just wanna watch all the eps so i can find it lmao
This show should be renamed "Do you still remember useless shit you may or may not have been taught back when you were in 5th grade?"
True
This is also in England, they probably learn different things than us
An education is not useless. How ignorant.
@@AnonymousC-lm6tc it is called a joke, y so serious, relax grab a beer calm down.
@@jujucasar2003 Some people actually believe that. But hey, genius of Thales was he measured the height of pyramid from trig alone. Now what if you are stranded?
"I think it might be Pokémon! I think it might be Pokémon! I think it might be Pokémon!"
"What are you thinking?"
"I THINK IT MIGHT BE POKÉMON!"
COME ON! SOOOOOOO EASY
But that is okay.
Anime and Undertale Trash c': I THINK IS MIGHT BE POKEMOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOONNNNNNNNNNNNNNN
noobies it is pokemon
JuSt SaY POkeMOn !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Neither of them could even say the word correctly.
this tv show ISN'T about being smarter than a 5th grader!! It's about general knowledge and memory.
I agree, I thought he was actually going to face off against a 5th grader. But it seems they only answer if he gets the answer wrong.
I mean.. sure. But at the same time they have, presumably, 5th graders on the show who do answer every question as well and they use their answers at times, as you know. Every question asked has to be answerable by a 5th grader. In that respect i do see it as being smarter than a 5th grader
If you generalized 5th graders, they’re not going to know this.
@@MaGiCFanz12 It's things they teach you up to 5th grade. Like anything else you lose it if you don't use it. Most these questions look like something that would be on a test that you would only remember if you had to study the subject that week.
@@itzamia I never denied that, I was just saying if every question has to be answerable by a 5th grader, then the title of the show isn’t misleading
I would have lost it at cardinal number what the heck is that they don't teach this in algebra 2
I don't know what the fuck a cardinal number is and I'm in Calculus lol. but 3 was the only number up there
That's because it's a linguistic term, not a mathematics term. In linguistics, st/nd/rd words ("first", "second", "third", etc.) are called ordinals, in contrast to cardinals. Actually, "cardinal number" does exist in set theory as a way to describe the size of a set, but I assume that's too advanced for this show.
NkGFX - FREE GRAPHIC DESIGN cardinal numbers are typically first introduced in a discrete math course or set/number theory, not calculus.
I took 10 courses in math in college and got a minor in math applications...and had no idea what a cardinal number was.
Sydney Shoaf I learned it when I was in 2nd grade, wth
I never learned this stuff in 5th grade
Same
Some of this stuff seems like it’s based on Australian culture so that might be why
It’s an American quiz show. Which means it’s probably based highly on American schooling.
So... no schooling at all then
Sui Yo oh but
lol the POKEMON part tho
Remember when Pluto was still a planet?
Pepperidge Farm remembers.
It's almost as if shows that go through questions really quickly are much more interesting than shows that drag things out for 'suspense'!
How sweet! You and your dad. I'm sure your kiddo's love seeing this stuff.
Who doesn't know about Pokemon
Ikr haha
Me
@@elijahyoung4395 pls you are joking right😭
I do not
I hate Pokémon
The question how many adjectives was wrong. It is not two . It is 4. A type of adjective is an "article". An aticle is an adjective and the only articles are "a" and "The". I know this,
I am in six grade. Adjectives answer questions such as "Which?". Which dog? It is THE dog and same thing applies to the other "the"
Thats exactly what i was thinking!
How is the Pokémon the 10,000 question? It should be 10 cents
Well to be fair it's aimed to be difficult for older people. They probably aren't keeping up with kid culture.
nobody:
brett connell: I THINK IT MIGHT BE POKEMON
Hey Brett! I was on this show!
Oh yh I remember you
Oh that's cool! How was the show behind the scenes?
Oh my GOD. When I saw Ash and Pikachu I just freaked out. POKEMONNNNNNN.
I'm an American, and whenever I watch the American version of this, I feel so smug, as I know so many answers. Watching this really humbles me, and makes me with I could learn more.
Edit: Why nursury rymes? I guess that's culture. That is part of learning. So far, I've only the known the adjective question and the pokemon one (oddly since I don't watch the show).
MrBagginsEsq I agree. I would've botched the very first one and been out of there.
MrBagginsEsq: Nursery rhymes is basically the Trick Question Category. Almost no adult will remember them unless they're parents. In Sweden, we just have the category "Music". If it's 1st to 2nd grade music, it'll undoubtedly be a nursery rhyme or children's song and almost no one ever gets it right.
I didn't know what a cardinal number was I had guessed double, but it turns out to be any number you count with (same as positive integers and natural numbers?). I think its related to sets and stuff.
Ordinal numbers are like 1st, 2nd, 3rd and so on.
I knew them all up to that nursery rhyme. Never heard of that
IDK, I'm aussie american and they're as into nursery rhythms as we are...also did you go wtf when he said Dragon Ball Zed too XD
i just realised the uploader of the video is the contestant himself. lol and a lot of you were bad mouthing him
That is amazing
I'm in going into 8th grade and i don't know what a cardinal number is. That's friken 3rd grade?! What the crap?!
Cardinal numbers are 0-9. An "Ordinal" number would be like Once, Twice, Thrice, etc.
dinbri Cardinal numbers : 1,2,3,4 ......20, 35 etc. Ordinal numbers : 1st, 2nd,3rd,4th, 48th, 99th etc. In fact you use them everyday without knowing what they are.
Kevin Howard Not exactly . 0 to 9 are figures. With these figures you can form numbers. It is like the difference between letters and words. Consider figures to be letters in maths and numbers to be words. So of course you have words with one letters and you have numbers with one figure.
Cardinal numbers are : 1, 2,3,4, never stop you can always ad 1.
Ordinal numbers ( because they show an order) are : 1st,2nd,3rd,4th, 28th,59th etc.
I thought it's Mark Zuckerberg
it is he gained weight
Most of this stuff wasn’t even taught in fifth grade or before that.
Lots of kids calling him stupid for not guessing "Pokemon" straight away for some reason so I congratulate him for winning $50,000.
These 5th graders got so much younger than when I watched this show last
My heart aches about the pokemon part...
When every kid says to pick Maddie, but you are a rebel and pick Liam.
If you think about it these 5th graders are now seniors in high school.
Hey, $50,000 tax-free Australian money is not bad at all, Brett. You did good!
What is a cardinal number good lord I'm past 5th
Cardinal numbers are numbers that tell you how many of something there are (1, 2 ,3, 4...), and "first", "second", "third", etc... are expressing the ORDER of something
@@tuongla5077 what
@@tuongla5077 Than how come the answer is 3? ❤
@@EmmaAus nah he got it wrong. Cardinal is like (One, Two, Three). Ordinal numbers is First, Second, Third
How is that math?? That’s 100% language wAT
I remember being a kid and I wanted to go on this show so bad when I got to 5th grade, I didn’t even know they had this in other countries
its funny wen they start sing the nursery rhymes Lool👌👌
excuse me, but it's Poke-Ayyyyy-Mon
I watched pokemon last time when there was still only 150 of them.
Now there are over 800.
Pluto IS still a planet, we just have more classes of planets. We have terrestrial (rocky) planets, gas giants, ice giants and dwarf planets. Pluto was not "demoted" or downgraded. It was reclassified.
Newmaidumosa No, the new definition says Pluto is a "dwarf planet". See that word in there? That word IS "planet".
Newmaidumosa I have to ask if YOU are kidding. Do you not even know word definitions? I copied this DIRECTLY from the Webster's dictionary page for the definition of "butter"
: a solid yellow substance made from milk or cream that is spread on food or used in cooking
: a food made from cooked fruit or roasted nuts that have been ground up
Peanut butter qualifies as "butter" under the second definition That leaves you in error with the example you used. Peanut butter IS in fact butter.
In the same way Pluto is a TYPE of planet. It has "planet" right in the name there.
Actually, yes, the Attorney General IS a General. In this context "general" means "leader".
Word have more than one meaning, they are not always used in their most common context. Sometimes they have more general (there's that word again) meaning.
Such as the terms "legally drunk" or "legally blind". That which is legal usually means that it is NOT illegal. For example, you can legally drive your car on the street. To legally drive you need to have a license or permit that proves to the State that you have demonstrated a set standard of competence for driving.
You can't be illegally drunk, or illegally blind. To be "legally blind" your visual aquity needs to be below a standard set by the state. To be legally drunk your level of intoxication must be OVER a limit set by the state.
Newmaidumosa How can you type the letters, in order p, l, a, n, e, t and then say it is not a planet? I don't understand that. these letter LITERALLY spell out the word "PLANET"
A grizzly bear and a black bear are both different animals, but they ARE both bears. Pluto was not demoted or downgraded. It was RECLASSIFIED.
I just wish you can tell me how you can type out the letters p, l, a, n, e, t then say "not a planet."
Eric Taylor: I'd suggest you look up the definition of the word planet. Or just read the Wikipedia article on it. The term planet is specific and does not include dwarf planets. Our solar system has 8 planets by the scentific AND lexical definitions of the word "planet".
And for good measure, peanut butter is, by definition, not butter, it's a paste, just like how jaffa cakes are not cakes, but biscuits and strawberries aren't actually berries.
Philip Wester
Is Pluto a type of "planet"? Yes it is a DWARF PLANET. Earth Venus Mercury and Mars are TERRESTRIAL PLANETS Jupiter and Saturn are GAS GIANT PLANETS Neptune and Uranus are ICE GIANT PLANETS.
By your definition extra solar planets are not planets, they do not orbit the sun.
This is pasted directly from Webster's page on "butter"
Full Definition of BUTTER
1
: a solid emulsion of fat globules, air, and water made by churning milk or cream and used as food
2
: a buttery substance: as
a : any of various fatty oils remaining nearly solid at ordinary temperatures
b : a creamy food spread; especially : one made of ground roasted nuts
Definition 2b counts peanut butter AS BUTTER.
Here's the link to that page.
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/butter
Can’t understand their crazy accents, even the kids have it... what?!? Mind blowing !!
I love this show
Love the excitement Brett cheers
That moment when you guest 12 stars right by placing stars randomly in a circle xD
That kid looked like he was gonna straight up slap him for not knowing Pokémon
12:38 me walking out from my final exam, trying to think of that answer during the exam and when I walk out from the examination hall , the answer just came into my mind hahahahahaha
Ok so I'm in 5th grade and we never learned that q thing in 4th grade
Halee Dunaway hows ninth grade going?
This show ended when I finished year four :(
"I THINK IT MIGHT BE PO KE MON"
The stars on the european flag don't represent countries...
Aaalllrighty buddy boy
i used to love this show
A Pokemon question!! :3
15:45 their talking about Mr. Peabody and Sherman!😀😀😀😀😀😀
Japanese animated BOOKS 😂 that makes sense
I WAS SCREAMING POKEMONN
I am guessing this is the Australia version for at first I was thinking European. They did not use fiat euros as payment and this was fiat dollars. I just wish that either some game show contestants when asked a question like "What would you do with the money" would say an answer like. "Fiat dollars are not money for they are not a store of value which is required for an item to be that of money like gold or silver."
***** This is the Australian version...
***** I AM AUSTRALIAN, I think I would know....
I know that it was originally and Australian TV show, but it is the Australian version. Like how we have X factor and the Voice, there is the US version of them shows even though they are the original...
DID THEY JUST??? THE IS AN ARTICLE AND IS AN ADJECTIVE
"Is" is a verb.
MR.MASTER HD Obviously... What is your point?
You said "is" is an adjective.
MR.MASTER HD No he said the is an article and the is an adjective. This is something and is something else
I'm confused.
Lolz 😂 took a while for him to NOT come up with Pokémon!!
Wow! Great job!!!
FOUR ADJECTIVES!!! THE IS AN ADJECTIVE!!!
Right! If I had been on the show, I would’ve argued it was four if they said I was wrong. Articles are considered adjectives, and the is an article
The excitement when he remembered Pokemon. Literally me all the time.
That girl Lily looks like my best friends sister Lily a few years ago.
Am I the only who who was never taught what a cardinal number is
Rizzity nope, I’ve never heard of a cardinal number in my life xD
Howling Burd19 lol
8 years ago. I just learned that there is such a program
"i think it might be pokemon i think it might be pokemon" xD
haha
I think it might be Pokemon! (3x)
What are you thinking?
Digimon!!
Bruh I live in Europe and not once did we ever talk about the european flag, and especially not how many starts in contained.
Lol all the jeopardy contestants should come here and just get all the money
This must be the version from Australia.
I don’t remember learning about any of this stuff in elementary school and first time hearing of cardinal numbers...
"I THINK IT MIGHT BE POKEMON!!" No duh it is Pokemon -_-
Facepalm, right?!!?!?!?!?!?!?!!?!
Bruh the dude is in his 40s why the fuck would he know what pokemon is
i still count pluto as the last planet though- idc if they said its not a planet..not even sure why they changed it after 100's of years
FordFalcon1962nBlue I can't think of Neptune as the last planet. If someone asked me what the last planet was on a show like this I'd probably say Neptune, but I will also feel that Pluto is the last planet.
FordFalcon1962nBlue: Pluto was discovered in 1930, less than 100 years ago. They changed its classification because its classification has always been shaky and they just discovered way too many things about Pluto that made it a not-planet than what makes it a planet. Also, Pluto isn't even the biggest dwarf planet in our solar system. That honour goes to Eris. If you're gonna count Pluto as a planet, we actually have 10 planets. Classifying Pluto as a planet simply due to tradition is stupid.
alright who gives a shit
People in the scientific community do, dumbass.
Australian Seth Meyer's as host of this lol
im gonna say 3 adjectives btw im in 5th grade ive waited to long to play this
I was breezing through this until they got to the Aboriginal Rugby Union player. You could ask every 5th grader in America that question and you'd never get a correct answer.
Well that's true, because the answer is wrong. The first Aboriginal to captain an Australian side, if we ignore the all-indigenous 1868 cricket team (not considered an official representative team) was Arthur Beetson for the Rugby League Kangaroos in 1973. They're right that it was Rugby, but wrong that it was the professional, not the amateur, code that got there first.
@@cygil1Interesting. I had forgotten Artie, which is a bit sad as I was a great supporter of Easts when he was their captain.
I knew about the Ella brothers in Rugby. Hopefully I would have got Artie if they had got the question right and had put Arthur.
I’m going into high school this year and I just found out what rugby is, plus I didn’t know what a cardinal number was until just now.
but seriously i figured out all of them in 5 secs
Definitely not 5th grade material but I also didn't get anything wrong. Basically just Jeopardy Lite because everything is pretty general knowledge
you might be the nicest person ive ever seen
“You’ve come to the right place we’ve got a bunch of under agers right here”
He was talking about yu gi oh XD
Oh dear I am very sad most of them didn’t know the surname of Mark, the first Aboriginal Australian, to captain an Australian team. I am not into sport, but back in the day Mark and his brothers were well known, at least in NSW and Queensland.
I am not sure where Brett is from - he can have a pass if he from one of the other states.
I don't watch/play pokemon but I know this
I love it❤❤
WHAT??? The is an article adj.
I’m thinking “learned all the answers and not listening to the questions and don’t know most of the answers”
A bonobo is nightblue3 these guys got it wrong KAPPA
My grandma told me about this and I like it
Apparently Australians think knowing how many stars there are on the EU flag is understanding history?
Oh GAWD
3.57 i shat my pants
Ok... WHO learns these in ELEMENTARY SCHOOL XD
i NEVER learned any of this!
Courtesy of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Worldwide Television and Digital Distribution.
Pluto is a dwarfffff planet it is tooooo small to be a planet
Those conversations lol
POKEMON!!!! I got tht in a second!!!!!
Even I knew the European flag question and I live in the United States.
23:08 TWELVE. TWELVE, TWEEEEELVEE
Well it depends on the time because if Pluto was still a planet, it depends on the year because every once in a while Neptune goes beyond Pluto.
HE THOUGHT IT WAS YUGIYOH LOL
Touch the snow he will bahahahahaha
16:10, the answer is wrong, the word “the” is an article, articles are always adjectives. The correct answer is 4.
That's... not how English grammar works
bouncing is not an adjective, it is a verb
Bouncing is an adjective. This is because it is describing ball. What kind of ball? A bouncing ball. Ran is the verb in this sentence, since it is telling what the dog does. If you were to label the main sentence parts, "dog" would be your simple subject; "ran" would be your simple predicate; "quickly" would be an adverb telling how the dog ran; and "after the bouncing red ball" would be a prepositional phrase.
No, it is a matter of how you use it. In "the bouncing ball", it is a addictive. In "the ball bounced" it is a verb
it's a participle - an adjective that is derived from a verb
You're dumb got to back to 5th grade.
Bounce is a verb, bouncing is an adjective/noun
ok but someone tell me where i can watch all the episodes of this show? i cant find it anywhere.. there was an episode with the wrestler The Big Show, can not find any trace of it on the internet. Just wanna watch all the eps so i can find it lmao
I was in 5th Grade in 2009.
This appears to be the Australian version
“The” is an adjective. The answer should have been four. What a scam