We Can't Solve this until we Invent New Words
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- Опубліковано 1 лип 2024
- All info is in the description!
0:00 Intro
0:27 The order 10 square
1:20 The holy grail
2:08 Smarter solutions
3:28 Results
4:14 Yeet
I guess I should have expected that, but it was still an interesting experiment.
Words: github.com/dwyl/english-words
Squares: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word_sq...
Word Squares (Vsauce2 video): • The Easiest Cryptograp...
Research: digitalcommons.butler.edu/cgi...
Sound effects from: freesound.org/
Music:
Bumper Tag : UA-cam Audio Library
Chess Pieces : UA-cam Audio Library
A Rising Wave - Jeremy Blake : UA-cam Audio Library
Book Bag - E's Jammy Jams : UA-cam Audio Library
After School Jamboree : UA-cam Audio Library
Dreams : Bensound (www.bensound.com/royalty-free...)
One has since been found. Check the wikipedia article noted in the video's description.
It was only a matter of looking at enough dictionaries and corpora of text.
Is that why this was recommended to me?
S C A P H A R C A E
C E R R A T E A N A
A R G O L E T I E R
P R O C O L I C I N
H A L O B O R A T E
A T E L O M E R E S
R E T I R E M E N T
C A I C A R E N S E
A N E I T E N S I S
E A R N E S T E S T
Including it here in case anyone checks in the future - VERY cool you created this video before that! Did you confirm that each of those 10 words were in your set @sirrandalot ?
I was about to scold him for not using tries (like the trie data structure) but the dude who make the 10-square did, according to his github java programme
also seems like he used lots of technical words too. but it's fair game i guess.
for those wondering:
S C A P H A R C A E
C E R R A T E A N A
A R G O L E T I E R
P R O C O L I C I N
H A L O B O R A T E
A T E L O M E R E S
R E T I R E M E N T
C A I C A R E N S E
A N E I T E N S I S
E A R N E S T E S T
and from wikipedia: "The solution... consists of five binary nomenclature epithets of species names, a term for a type of inorganic compound, and a name for a precursor form of an organic compound, as well as a rarely used word, an obsolete word and a standard English word, with the newest word having been introduced in 2011."
@@Yadobleryou sound like you just started to learn how to program
I was thinking you could enumerate all 10x10 squares that could be completed with a single new word and analyse those, to see, if they have plausible English phonetics, so we can start a concerted effort to get it accepted as a valid new word
As much as I refuse to stand for new words that don't have a reasonable basis in prior language, I like this idea.
In 2023, Matevž Kovačič from Celje, Slovenia compiled several publicly available dictionaries and large corpora of English texts and developed an algorithm to efficiently enumerate all word squares from large vocabularies, resulting in the first perfect 10-square. The newest word in it has been introduced in 2011. So, just a dictionary issue, i guess. It was possible, yay!
First of all, we need to ask if one is sufficient. Perhaps the truth is that 2 or 3 (or more) new words are needed for this problem to be solvable.
Either way... I am stoked for this and will incorporate these words into my vocabulary.
@@freescape08 Genuine question. How is this not all words? Like, There is not a singular original language which has always existed and from which all words are derived. Somewhere down the line with all words, Someone made something up which is not derived from a previously existing word. It's just not always obvious because for most words, That process happened a really really long time ago in a completely different language.
Some new words are stupid. That is inarguable. But what you are advocating for is effectively the death of a language evolution process which has been happening for thousands of years.
My first thought exactly!
The question is, how close does it get? If we can get it so that one more word is all that's needed, then we can determine what that word would be easily, thus creating a new word that literally means "the solution to a 10x10 word square".
Good god....
Get this man a grant.
It would have been so funny if this was what happened but it already got solved (check wikipedia article in description)
@@Pato-ey4ez We'll do it to the next "unsolveable" one then :P
@@Pato-ey4ez 11 letters you say?
I particularly like the concept of a higher dimensional word square, like a word cube or more.
Word tesseract
@@joshuaburnett7643You want language to bend space-time to the point of folding the universe in half so as to enable transdimensional travel akin to teleportation?
@@diegoxavier9107yes.
@@diegoxavier9107 a tesseract is just a 4d cube (like how a cube is a 3d square)
Better yet a word line
The end quote “yeet” has so much depth. It made me think about life and universe we live in. Such an inspiring quote
YEET
that, truly, was a yeet
It's funny that, because it's made its way into some's everyday vocabulary, it pretty much is a legitimate English word that schools may someday have to teach
well yeah we have Lannan Eacott to thank for that.
I think the word “morb” should be added to the dictionary to mean, “to perform an inexplicable action”
its morbin time
I cried when he said "it's dictionaryin' time" and dictionaryed all over the villains
@@FlopgamingOne yeah and then the encyclopedia came up and tried to kill him but got dictionaried all over. There was so much dictionarying all over the place and he dictionaried all over that encyclopedia guy that he exploded from the amount of dictionarieness filling the room
morange
@@PETRIXXXXwhat language is that
Looking at some incomplete tables could be a way to invent new words,
If a corresponding word to continue the table has not been found, continue on the same table with a blank space witch could be any letter,
then if the table can be completed you can deduce what word need to be invented for that table to become valid, generating new unecessary things fo us to give a meaning.
There's a really cool variation of Wordle called Squardle, where six 5-letter words are arranged in three rows and three columns, to make a square of intersecting words with four holes in the middle. Every week, there's also weekly board that's completely filled, with five words in each direction, which this video reminded me of. Of course, the words aren't the same in each direction, because that would ruin the point of the puzzle.
I have invented a new word!
"AAAAAAAAAA"
It means "to be incredibly anxious"
This was awesome! Really interesting idea, and brilliant number crunching!
I dont know why this got suddenly recommended,
but i dont regret clicking it.
The title of this video is so catchy, I'm convinced it's like 99% of the best possible title.
We are not just casually inventing 10 letter words. The reason we invent so many words like yeet and yolo is because they’re short, catchy, easy to say, easy to remember lol I would shocked if kids just started saying a new 10 letter word
It's just a joke
I don't know what my problem is but when I saw the yeet at the end, I decided I could make my own 4x4 puzzle based off "yeet" and now an hour later, I'm finished.
Y E E T
E N V Y
E V E R
T Y R E
Now this is the first time I've ever seen one of this so I probably did it wrong, but there's my brain doing something completely pointless rather than working on something I've been procrastination on for 3 day.
Nice xD Feels like a poem
I was more bored so I made one with “yeets” 💀 it does use a slightly obscure word “etyma”, a word that describes words that are earlier forms of words (lol)
Y E E T S
E A T E N
E T Y M A
T E M P I
S N A I L
@@puzzLEGOwhere did you go? sorry if a bit intrusive but why dont you upload again, i used to watch your videos sm
@@nico.atreides school work + lack of motivation, it’s really annoying cause I wanna keep making content but whenever I try it feels impossible to get the motivation. My last school exams end in November though, so maybe after then?
Damn you did it first.
well yeah, yeetenings was probably not on that list, but I don't think that's gonna solve the problem
As a longtime Scrabble (TM) player, I find that the hardest rule to define is whether a word is English. Is "edelweiss" an English word? It's the German name for a flower found in Austria, but English doesn't have any other name for it. (You didn't mention slang specifically, but the same problem occurs.)
I'd say it is. Portmanteau is another funny one imo
0:25
If you could swap ember and abuse, then the diagonal spells humid
4:21 Such an emotional backround.
This is some quality UA-camr content! Keep it up :)
The artist watsky did something similar to this for his last three albums. COMPLAINT, PLACEMENT, and INTENTION. When the covers are arranged next to each other they form like this
COM PLA INT
PLA CEM ENT
INT ENT ION
3:47 imagine if the program randomly founded like 39 order 10 that are correct 😂 that would be a blow
Guarantee this will get tons of views from the title. A+ title and thumbnail and quality content.
lol
You have such a nice way to explain computer stuff :D its really fun to watch
Wow that was actually very cool... I´ve been wondering myself since I watched that video, but didn´t have the knowledge, time or will power to try it myself. Cool!
this video was quite chobblesome
Now this is a video that values your time.
Let's add Yeetlessly to the dictionary to increase the number of 10 letter words
yeetlessly [adverb, y-ee-t-luss-li] | derived from yeetless (to not be able to throw, unable to yeet), which is derived from yeet (to throw, or launch over a long distance, typically with the hands) | to perform an action in a way which doesn't involve the process of yeeting, or launching over a long distance. | He yeetlessly passed the ball.
Utter yeetage ending
time to invent a word that allows to work with 9 already existing words together for the perfect word square order 10.
It can sound as stupid as we want. the words existence is to complete the word square which would give it a meaning and existence
I can't tell you how much I adore that "yeet" is a real word at this point. And it's not like, tech words that get invented because a new thing exists, like "webisode" or "bitcoin". It's just something that happened on its own. In a couple centuries it'll just be a normal word, fully integrated into the language.
It's a slang word, it will either die out sooner or later unless people really fall in love with it and it stays forever. OK was slang once but it survived, but only the strongest words survive the test of time, now ask yourself, is yet ready for the ultimate test of time?
Glonb means “I have no idea what’s going on and I’m happy about it”
I wonder if there are already old english words that could be included that would make it possible. Like in some sense its not the same language but it still feels like it would be fun to try.
3:20 using unitys great particle system
Wonder if a german 10x10 would be possible. Maybe even comparatively easy
I seriously doubt it. German does have the advantage of being additive, but its vocabulary at large is smaller than English and it's also very consonant-heavy in ways that aren't conducive to identifying solutions for larger values of n. (Also there aren't a whole lot of words that start with c, ä, or ß)
Very good production. Nice work!
the fact that "yeet" is it's own portion of the video...
"Tanga Tanga"
That is hilarious beyond belief
Nolan will put the 10-word square in Tenet 2
I regret to inform you this video is gonna gain a lot more view in the next coming days.
HEADS UP CAPTAIN!
3:25 you forgot to put “neglect air resistance for the sake of simplicity” in the “How to make it go faster” list!
Time for someone to invent words just to make this possible
It has to catch on into the cultural norm.
Yeetilicious is the key word for our 12 square.
Thank god this channel exists I feel like I’ve found a friend
Trie sounds like the tool for this job
It would be great to see how close your algorithm got.
Then take the ‘missing’ word(s), make definitions, and start using them in society to try to get them to become actual words.
why did that last shot make me laugh out loud
3:20 that "donk" really caught me by surprise
how was this video only 4 and a half minutes long, it was a whole journey
This is actually pretty interesting, as it's as much a maths problem, as a linguistics one!
Imagine thousands of years ago, when we first started trying to speak to each other and forming words. Now we've found a way to have a machine do all the work for us. Insane!
From Unga Bunga to Beep Boop YEET
Dude why if I see a word starts with "imp" with red color my brain will automatically think it's "imposter" 💀
sus
4:11 Problem with that; the younger gen likes simpler easier to spell words like, "rizz", "yeet", etc. They like double conscience and double vowel words and words that are simple in size like 3 to 4 words.
0:52 that actually scared me? don't know why
Step 1: Solve for 9/10 words. Step 2: Identify combination of letters that could form the tenth word. Step 3: Create a new word using that combination of letters, the new word meaning something along the lines of "A set of ten words forming a word square." ... not only one you complete the ten word square, you would in the same cut the scythe make use of that very word to describe the solution.
But what is the maximum size of a word square where each line can be also read from right to left and bottom to top and still have all valid English words?
3×3:
p o t
o d a
t a r
(pot - top, oda - ado, tar - rat)
4×4:
p o t s
o c r a
t r a p
s a p s
(pots - stop, ocra - arco, trap - part, saps - spas)
yeetorious- a portmanou of yeet and victorious. to win by launching your opposition into second place. (also i just made it up to be 10characters long)
Let’s invent Jupitering this is the action of picking a nose hair and smelling it.
I'm from Letchworth GC (the palce Rex Gooch is from) and it is so weird seeing my tiny town on a video lol
I’d like to see the closest possible ones using this technique
0:52 jesus christ I thought those sounds were irl
fire fr
Now make it that you see the one that filled the most letters to see what words we need
"It needs to be English."
Alright, time to steal some words from the Indians.
Alright guys, time to make up ten words for an order 10 word square
Let’s make this a reply thread for invented ten-letter words 😂
Here’s my contribution:
Dysdoxical. [From the Ancient Greek ‘δυσ-‘ and ‘δόξα’]
Characterised by feelings of distress or frustration with some aspect of popular perception.
Unfortunately this word has an X and a Y so I doubt it’ll be very helpful for word square creation but you never know.
paintfully [adverb, pay-n-t-full-li] • derived from paint (noun, a colo[u]red substance, applied to objects to change of reinforce their colo[u]r | verb, to apply paint onto an object) and -fully [suffix] • to do something that involves paint | to do something with extreme joy, as if the world is made of vibrant colo[u]rs from paint • I paintfully came to do work on the building.
unlikely to be used, but, it works.
dang, i can't edit my comments, so, in the noun definition of paint, change of reinforce is actually change or reinforce.
@@JustAHuman-gb5go There should be a drop-down menu in the lower right corner of your comment, to the right of your likes, that has an edit button
@softpaw6234 can't see it
If you include phrases and hyphens, it increases the chance of finding a 10 x 10.
when i heard the music instantly thought sml
Clearly, you could've done this easily if you had a brand new computer with 512 megabytes of RAM.
Simply make one without words and call the different order word squares by the words you created
underrated af
that has yeetality
my final words, “yeet.”, goodbye.
I wonder if it would be possible to make a 5x5 where no single letter shows up more than once.
That's completly impossible
@@MouldMadeMind Care to explain your reasoning?
Hearing the intro music felt like a vietnam flashback
1:00 The DAWG program?
I have to wonder now, if you were able to find a reliable trend for how many new words come into common use, fall out of use, and how many new random words would have to be added to complete a perfect 10, how accurately could one predict how long it would take before the perfect 10 becomes possible. This is of course assuming that the addition, subtraction, and length of words follows a trend and that trend stays consistent into the future.
Edit: Just saw that one has actually been discovered, so nevermind
Jumblistic
Mumbojastic
Throughtle
Manjesterable
Applasuable
DESCRIPTION IDEAS TO THESE WORDS NOW AND PLEASE
I appreciate the effort but a couple of those are longer than 10 letters
Do a search for what word we need to invent to make it work.
Good video 👍
if you proved it's not possible then you did solve it
3:03 how did you do that. That’s hello in Norwegian. Wow
Truthiness is a recent 10 letter word!
New Ten Letter Word
Imgonnacuh
Did you include chemical and medical nomenclature?
The SML music caught me off guard-
Can you use your code to find out how many valid 9 letter word squares there are?
Almost certainly, given how it works for different sizes of squares. His answer would depend on his dictionary, and wouldn't necessarily be 100% correct.
The word untillable, description, impossible, passionate, antibiotic, resistance, imperative, unpleasant, underneath And determined exists. Give me support it took a long time 😥🙏
What dictionary are you using?
The background music is so sml
Programmers are mentally unwell. If you or someone you love is or has been affected by a programmer then please alert your local law enforcement and get them to a medical professional.
🤓 affected*
yeet
Quick question - why stop at 4, why not create a full Trie?
You'd then need a table with 26^10 entries. Not feasible or efficient. 26^4 is only 456k, much more doable.
More generally, once the average size of an entry in the tree (4 in the random example) is less than the number of branches you'd need to make another layer (26 here) it's not efficient to make another layer.
So .. task failed successfully !
bruh the dani karlson music 💀
You should try this with other languages
you should have ended, "thanks for watching and i will see you in the next video. YEET!"
522KB of ram for this period of time is actually good
Did you try the longest word?
We were saying "Yeet" back in the late eighties, early nineties. Who knew?!
XD did you try turning it on and off again?
Ah yes, @2:13 Nskeulofdt, Pyenlguadd, and Kbrnustpny, my favourite anti-hair loss drugs