best description of English I’ve heard
“English is the language that waits in alleyways waiting for other languages to walk by so it can mug them for spare prefixes”
"The problem with defending the purity of the English language is that English is about as pure as a cribhouse whore. We don't just borrow words; on occasion, English has pursued other languages down alleyways to beat them unconscious and rifle their pockets for new vocabulary." -James Nicoll
That'll happen when your language comes from Germany but the Romans, Scandinavians, and French take turns forcing you to speak their languages
@@zakd2124 Germanic doesn't mean from Germany whatsoever. The Proto Germanic language from which English, German, all of the Scandinavian languages and many others descended from was spoken partially where Germany is but the direct ancestors of English came mostly from modern day Denmark.
@@KatzRool (edited to be more polite) That’s not quite right; take a look at migration maps and linguistic maps. There’s a reason the closest language to English is Frisian, because the lands to the East of Frisia (which lie in modern-day Germany) are a large portion of where the English (Anglo Saxons) come from. Y’know, one of the regions being Lower Saxony, where the Saxons came from. A portion of the group came from modern-day Denmark for sure, but to assert that it’s wrong to say Germany and that I’m just assuming “Germanic” means “English comes from German” is just not an accurate assumption for you to make here.
“What do you call a drive-through liquor store?”
A tragedy bound to happen
I call them Dairies, but that is specific to the city I grew up in which was a Drive-Thru Liquor store owned by a Dairy in my square-mile town, Hawaiian Gardens, however, I have seen some in other cities within Los Angeles County and they are also owned by Dairies but some people don’t call all of them Dairies.
Fun fact: The way you put a stress on certain words determines whether it's a noun or a verb. RECord is a written documentation of something. recORD is the action of documenting things
A recording of the record of recordings at the recording room of the record store that is located next to the recording room that broke a world record for best records made in a recording room storing records.
@@lukebligh751 another example. to deSERT something is to abandon it. DESert is a dry hot natural biome
If I remember correctly, the name of that is accent (not the way you speak kinda accent)
You don't put the stress on a certain syllable, but a letter.
rEcord, recOrd.
I called sun showers "God's tinkle" once and everyone reacted so viscerally to that that I try my hardest to call it that *every* time
Down here in Michigan, for some inexplicable reason, we call potholes "roads"
Cant wait for things like "the wolf is giving birth" and "the devil is beating his wife" to be reoccurring characters for Huggbee vids
Didn't realize "the devil's beating his wife" was such an unusual phrase to others. Its all I heard in KY
I asked my friends that live in the south and I can’t believe they actually use “the devil is beating his wife”
Edit: fyi the ppl i asked live in florda, alabama and Tennessee
@@cooldude-qz1gf its just the way we say it. I assume because its so damn unusual and seemingly unnatural that the phrase used to describe it don't matter too much and must be nonsensical themselves
I’m pretty sure I actually heard the French version of “the devil is beating his wife” where I live (Quebec) from 60yo or higher
Here's a strange one:
Everyone in my city, every single person, uses the term "whore" to refer to my mother
Im german and can totally relate to that video. Considering that my country was completely split up for hundreds of years, we developed so many slangs and dialects that a person from northern saxony could not understand a person from bavaria or hessia...
@@HappyBeezerStudios Well, most of the german population now speaks "Hochdeutsch"
As a part of an English class, we all took this quiz. I live in Jersey and everyone’s results reflected either Jersey or New York. I got the Sun/rain question and thought it was funny. Five months later, as I’m working at a summer camp, it starts to rain while the sun is out. Some kid from Tennessee looks up, sighs, and says “looks like the devil’s beating his wife”.
Isn't that a southwest thing? I remember watching a video about the whole meaning of it, it's fucking stupid but it makes sense
I was also working at a summer camp when someone from Memphis said “the devil’s beating his wife”
Fun fact: when I was in third grade I got “colonel” wrong on a spelling test even though I knew how to spell it. But young me thought “im pretty sure it’s c-o-l-o-n-e-l, but that makes so little sense! If it turns out that I’m wrong and it isn’t spelled this way, the teacher will probably think something’s wrong with me!” I basically gaslit myself and made myself so self-conscious that I spelled it out phonetically on the test instead and got it wrong.
"Kernel" is a legitimate word to describe the underlying level in operating systems.
And the skin on Corn
@@VladTerrible well, yes. Kernels are corn seeds, and an OS kernel is the base from which everything else grows.
To be fair, if you were provided no definition, then "kernel" is a real word.
I live in Oregon, and everyone around me calls the small fresh water crustacean 'crayfish'. And I'm screaming and crying and throwing up saying NO ITS 'CRAWDAD' and my family, who is from Oregon, are the onlybones in my town who say 'crawdad'.
Calling Mountain Screamers “Painters” is like shitting your pants in front of Cartoon Saloon claiming that is your Magnum Opus.
One of the most enlightening parts about this quiz is discovering that I do not have words for a lot of these concepts.
Quite a few of the "What do you call X?" questions I just thought '...I just call it X.'
Same here. Especially with the rain when sun is shining. I just say "it's rainy and sunny at the same time"
@@FG-dh6pr "What do you call a liquor store with a drive through?"
A crime?
I actually have heard “the devil is beating his wife” from my dad and mom, but I always thought it was stupid and wondered how anyone could ever come up with that
Kept getting distracted by the fact that his headphones got partially cut off by the Greenscreen and looks like it’s just connected to his ear
The whole "concept of an aunt" thing actually makes sense to me. I refer to my aunt as "ant" but when I mention her in conversation I use the "haunt" pronunciation to avoid confusion.
I'm similar, but with "mom". The concept is a mom, but my mom is Mum. Picked it up from my dad, and I guess it's kind of a Boston thing to spell it "mom" but pronounce it "mum".
Tried the quiz as a German and unsurprisingly, I got most similar for California and New England. That's what happens when you learn English by watching movies and TV shows.
Interesting! As someone from Spain learning mainly through the internet, and a bit in school, I got the most compatibility with northern New York (a city called Rochester apparently?), and also some with Hawaii.
@@PhantomKING113 Huh, this is funny. I'm actually from Rochester! Not a bad place, I must say. Beware of our winters, though.
If you learned from media yes. But you will have most in common with people from the Dakota's and Alberta. There's where all the German colonies went, especially the black Sea Germans. That's why I'm here
@@KNR90 I don't think that makes it likely for someone from Germany to have a lot in common with them. Within Germany there is a lot of variation both culturally and linguistically. Back when people emigrated to America, they would mostly do so from certain areas and back then the differences within Germany were even greater, since Germany was much larger geographically.
@@Saufs0ldat yeah but a a ton of German communities moved to the Dakota's, so by definition more likely
In my area (central Pennsylvania) we speak with a strange hybrid of Canada-Philadephia. Here is a brief lexicon:
"Hobott" - "Hey bud", a greeting
"Oh char" - "Yes", supposed to be "Oh Sure"
"Breskays" - "Alcohol", presumably supposed to be Brewskies
16:12 thank you, finally someone who knows what a freaking baguette is. Not every long dry loaf of bread is a baguette, those loaves all have their own names, a baguette is usually the longest, thinnest loaf you can find in whatever area you're in, it's more like an extra long breadstick than a loaf if you want to think of it that way, they can be four feet long and still narrow enough to wrap your hands around. My French teacher was adamant about not referring to every random long bread as a baguette, she had a poster on the wall of a man riding his bike with six foot long baguettes hanging off the back and would point it out to us when learning food names to show us what real baguettes look like since no one even makes real ones around here.
Not so much a local dialect thing, but more an inside joke. My friends and I refer to ice cream sandwiches as "cold samuels". This came about from someone shortening sandwich to sammys, which eventually became re-lengthened to samuels. And ice cream being changed to ice cold, and then to just cold.
Alright normally I hate these "my friends do this in joke" thing but "an ice cold samuel" really got me laughing
“When the Devil is beating his wife” is an old saying, mostly used by older folk in the south. My family uses that saying, and it’s becoming so antiquated that I’ve never met anyone outside the family who knew the meaning off the top of their head, and I live in a fairly southern state.
I still use this phrase except now I live in the north east so no one knows what the fuck I'm talking about and I get alot of weird looks from most of my southern colocalisims (almost positive I spelled that wrong, honestly didn't even know where to begin, smh)
I say it && im from NY but I picked it up off some southern friends during my time in the military
Here to make a clarification with the term "Coke" as many northern states find it weird. Southern people only use this as a place holder before they know what drink they are getting. You will never see someone call the drink they have a coke once they buy it (unless it is a coke) but if they are heading to the store they might say im gonna grab a coke even if they have no intentions of getting a Coca-Cola product. Post purchase people typically start reffering to it as a soda.
honestly i totally get the aunt one. when i'm talking about someone who actually EXISTS, like my aunt lisa, i pronounce it "ant". but if i'm talking about someone totally made up, like aunt gertrude going to the shoprite to yell racial slurs at the cashier, i pronounce it "aunt".
I alternate between which aunt I'm talking about, mother's side "ant". father's side is "aunt".
As an actual Scotsman, born, raised and living in Scotland, I can tell you that we lay no claim to the name nor idea of 'Cabbage night' that sin is yours and yours alone
you aren't a real Scotsman if you don't talk about cabbage night daily
As a Texan, who's lived in Texas my whole life, I took this quiz and the results were most likely based around Florida. I think they got us confused 😅
Also from Texas, I got California. That makes sense since I tend to try to stray away from contractions like y’all and ain’t, and I use more standard English vocabulary for stuff.
@@jacobdaniels3246 honestly i still use "ya'll" but tend to avoid most Texan phonetics. Nothing but bad times in this state and im itching to leave lol
@@Ryan_Carder you’re the outlier. it got you right and no one else ever
Texas as well but actually got Texas (specifically Northern Texas) (but also Louisiana) 👍🏻
As a Pennsylvanian, I don't think I've ever heard a single person in my entire life say "yinz." Not my friends, not my parents, not my grandparents, nobody.
I once went down the "sunshower" rabbit hole, and there are so many more weird names for that around the world. Granted, a ton of them have to do with some combination of devils and/or animals marrying, crying, beating, or leaving but it's still pretty fascinating.
Was one of them "mushroom rain"? That's what my dad always calls it 😂
I did the test and whenever they were like "what do you call this?" i realized that my way of saying it naturally is none of the above because im german.
@@gavinhughes6054 They use compoundcompoundcompoundcompound-compound words. Kraftfahrzeug-Haftpflichtversicherung is something you own, well, I mean, I hope you own vehicle liability insurance cause that's what that says. Yeah.
@@Suiseisexy im currently learning german as a native English speaker and so german words will slip into my everyday vocabulary. like instead of saying and ill say und because it flows better. ill also just forget the word in English but then remember it in german and will just say it in german hoping someone will understand it. but also german is very specific and I just find it so lovely
@@deermasscannon7285 it does have a wonderful tendency to produce useful new words, many of these are entering english wholesale because they have no equivalent, like weltschmerz or zeitgeist, others are taking on new meanings in english, like "angst" doesn't mean "anger" in english but is specifically the brooding and anti-social behavior of chronically angry people, or some are more technical like the English Literature term for "coming of age novel" is literally just bildungsroman. german is really cool sometimes because it will just go make a word for something that is hard to talk about at all.
@@Suiseisexy or it has words that are in English that mean something really different in German. Like the most common example is the word Gift. Gift means present in English but in German it’s poison.
As a Pennsylvanian I love that the word "jawn" can just be put in a sentence and mean both anything ever and also nothing
As a Philadelphian I find it halarious a word we used as kids in the early 2000's that fell out of style for being lame got picked up by white kids from Jersey who moved there in the late 2010's and thought it was the coolest shit ever.
My Grandpa had a weird specific slang word although he was 83 by the time he died he flatout called everything that one could play with whether it was a Ventriloquist Puppet or a Trading Card a "Doll" and called video games "Controlled Talkies"
I use dippy eggs instead of sunny side-up. For the longest time I thought it was just a weird name my family came up with, but apparently it's a regional thing to Northeast PA.
That’s wild, dippy eggs are soft boiled eggs in Britain rather than fried eggs with a visible yolk (sunny side up). There was a contestant on the Masked Singer UK, who was yesterday revealed to be the TV presenter Nicky Campbell, who dressed in an egg cup outfit and called himself ‘dippy egg’
I’m Australian.
I’ve had more than one strange conversation about how we call flip flops “thongs”
Apparently it’s a term for speedos
Not just any speedos, specifically those very skimpy bikinis. Partially overlaps with what is also referred to as a "G-string". From Old English þwong, þwang "narrow strip of leather" (used as a cord, band, strip, etc.). As a kind of sandal, first attested 1965; as a kind of bikini briefs, 1990.
we also use thong for the kind of underwear (g-string) to to be extra confusing down here
Delaware has the amazing “Punkin Chunkin” a fucking contest where people try to slingshot whole ass pumpkins as far as they can with homemade catapults.
In Norway it’s even stranger. We have like 10 different ways to pronounce the word for I. We also have two written languages which are typically understood by everyone
"I'm going to karate chop your otolaryngologist in the ears, nose, and throat" is a fucking incredible line, holy SHIT
The regionally appropriate term for "hamburgers" in Albany, New York is steamed hams.
Though phrased as "steamed", a steamed ham is typically grilled, and served on a platter often containing more than a quarter dozen of the aforementioned dish and various french fries.
Not to be confused with "steamed clams", a similarly phrased dish which can often be mistaken for steamed hams.
@UCrKTTb0EZSwH2Ly4x99xxoQ hey uhh stop
I know you want to make money but just stop thot
Idk where I heard it but I heard somebody call it a ‘cheesy’ the cheeseburger he was holding.
There are multiple different names for a small flowing body of water where I live. If it's very small and directly behind a house it's a leak, if it's a little bigger it's a crick, further out and larger is a creek, and anything in the middle of a creek and a river is just "the water"
The fact that he made a call back to the inside out sphere video made me laugh my ass off. Also huggbees continues to be absolutely based due to the fact that even in character he is respecting his Aunt (not Aunt)
In my hometown, we call roundabouts "spinwops", cabbage is "leaf apples", and cell phones "the rectangle". Thought we had normal words for things until I moved out.
@@TheScience69 that’s so interesting… “the rectangle” really gets me, it’s so strange and literal
Heck, I live in the states and I call my phone a "rectangle". Largely because I've long hated the things, and when I finally got one a few years back, I called it an "alien space rectangle". They're just so esoteric and doopy compared to less limited computational systems.
As a texas native I will happily supply the knowledge that “Y’all’d’n’t’ve” is a thing here and yes, it’s as rough to get used to saying as it looks and unless your in the right areas most people don’t usually use it. There are SEVERAL other contractions like that, it’s just the longest!
Wasn't that contracting business a whole ass meme back last year or something?
I absolutely adore multiple contractions like y'all'd'n't've, just because they are so hilarious and nonsensical, yet also make perfect sense. Hell, I was born in and live in northeast Ohio and I use y'all. (I lived in the south for like 10% of my life, but that's the only "southernism" I use.)
I'm from Wisconsin and went to a summer camp that had kids from all over the US... I asked where the "(water) bubbler" was and that's when I learned that "bubbler" is a regional dialect. It's what I've called it my entire life and never even questioned it; so I had to explain to a group of Illonis kids (who were my cabin mates) what the hell I was asking about lmao
Also, when I took this quiz, I learned that we Southern Wisconsinites have a VERY specific way we talk. Like I only had that part of the map highlighted; everything else was not like suggested or however you wanna put it lmfao
"The wolf is giving birth" hit me like a ton of bricks and I cant stop laughing
i mean, it is still part of a road if it has that asphalt or whatever roads are made of
oh god I remember learning english as a second language and being so confused about all there pronounciations but whenever I'd ask about which is right I'd always be hit with an infuriating "it depends"
You also need to learn that there their and they're are different words and aren't interchangeable same with your and you're
Hey man, don't worry, I'll sort this all out for you.
All you have to do is remember that you're in America.
I america we don't speak eniglish, we speak American!
That's because english is only for those British people
With all the different regions we have here and all the different ways of saying the same thing. All you have to do to speak american is point and make sounds and a true american sould be able to help you out.
Just say some things that sound close ish to what they should and kinda like what you want to say and you should do fine.
Because rhats just how American works.
Cincearly, Florida Man
go with your gut and be prepared to be corrected by someone no matter what you say
@@superguyrichard But... I heard you guys spoke Freedom? I'm confused now...
as a lifelong GA native, I am told by people everywhere else that people here call everything coke. Literally have never witnessed this in my entire life. Not once would it even occur to me to call anything but coke by its name.
As a Pittsburgher, whenever he said Yinz is from Philly Delphia, I felt my blood boil in rage
I love how Hug saw how much of a match he had for Texas and didn’t even notice how he was basically perfect for Maine
I wasn’t born here but I’ve lived here since 6 and my mom is from MA and dad from PA but my accent is midwestern apparently
@@justkittensbeingkittens5892 sorry about the masshole blood running through your veins. As long as you learned how to drive like a civilized human being and don't act like a complete p.o.s, no one should notice.
I remember I was making a drinks run for some people at work. Asked one dude from texas and he said he wanted an orange coke. I had never heard that before as a general term for soda, but I had seen Orange Coke "like Vanilla Coke but orange" at the gas station earlier that week. He meant an orange soda, but I got him Orange Coke and the look of confusion on his face was priceless.
My gag reflex activated when he pronounced French “quatre” as kwah-tray instead of kaht
So far I've only lived in utah and Washington, EASTERN washington. Rain is a thing only for spring, plus summer and fall storms. We don't have a word for this because I in my 17 years have only seen this twice. We're just like "holy crap its raining but the sun's still out? I forgot that that's possible!" And then its over.
Part of the reason why its so rare in utah is because you dont have a horizon, you just have the mountains, so if theres a cloud above, it takes up the rest of the sky almost always.
Here's one I know of: In a lot of the more suburban and rural parts of Canada (Nova Scotia I'm most sure of since it's where I grew up), people call cigarettes "darts". This kind of makes sense, since some people hold cigarettes in the same way they hold actual darts, between their thumb and pointer finger, but from doing a bit of research, the term actually originates from Australia. This makes it even more confusing as to why a lot of Australians (to my knowledge at least) call cigarettes "durries". This term is thought to derive from the brand name Bill Durnham, which was a popular brand of loose tobacco used for roll-your-owns. Durnham then got shortened to durry because...Australian colloquialism nonsense.
Yeah, everyone use to call them darts years ago but then everyone started calling them durries, it just changed with the generation. Tbf tho, saying durries sounds so much better in an Australian accent, and also it confuses the fuck out of foreigners as well.
Aussie slang is weird, and I love it, especially nicknames that wind up being shit like Bazza, just a great system
I'm American but call cigarettes darts because of the show letterkenny. At work when it's break time me and my friend will say "I'd have a dart" just like Wayne in letterkenny.
If I had a filling machine for every stupid rule of the english language, I'd be able to afford so many rinsing machines
god i love this little thread so much. hope y’all are having a great day
My mom says, "You look like you ate a cat." When someone looks suspicious or like they've done something wrong.
It's interesting to see the different dialects from around the states. I've adapted many terms and pronunciations from around the states. Not exactly intentionally, but just getting influenced by TV, and among other things. I even use Australian terms, even though I'm from the US.
I think one of the best regional slang words is just "ope". It can be used in place of almost every exclamation, and can generally be put in front of most phrases.
Also, I like y'eouch
oop, lemme just scoooot right past ya here... ope, sorry, just a sec...
I use ope is south western Missouri. I lived in north dakota for a couple winters, and I think I picked it up there.
People sure do get inventive with ways to explain rain when the sun's out, it seems. In my country we speak Spanish and we say the equivalent of "a witch is getting married". Glad to see we're not the only weird ones!
I've heard "the devil is beating his wife" when it rains with the fun out
@@MeesterTweester Yeah, I get weirded out by a lot of sayings people have for things that don't need a name beyond their already simple description.
My personal favorite is crick, like im gonna go fishing at the crick wanna come?
You're probably thinking ahh creek
No it's river, creeks are gullies
I’m from Michigan and call the event where rain falls while the the sun is out “The Devil’s Asscrack”
"pterodactyl" and "pneumonia" start with a "p" because the p is pronounced in Greek, its a direct loan word
And i wrote that just as you said "all the people coming to defend this spelling"
@@lihzzahrdspeed6631 you just do, its natural for native speakers.
We also have other interesting combinations that will blow your mind like "kt" (ktirio) "xt" (xtizo) "mn" (anamnisi) "zv" (svino) etc
You know what makes calling soda coke even better, I’ve heard more than once they ask “hey can you get me a coke” “sure what do you want” “can you get me a mnt dew”
i actually call sunshowers "monkey's weddings" and now i realize that sunshower is a much more sensible name
Southern US here, people vastly oversimplify the coke vs soda thing here. Like if you went into a restaurant and asked for a coke they'd give you a coke, not ask you what kind. It's way more contextual I guess. Its really hard to articulate, everyone kind of just gets it down here.
Actually the whole general concept of an aunt thing from the video is the perfect way to describe it.
The general concept of a nonspecific soda is Coke here, but if you are directly talking about an orange soda and call it a coke someone will probably ask if you are color blind.
I was so happy to see Huggbees have the exact same idea about how useless the letter "C" is. And with the same exact reasoning too
UA-cam search for "jan misali c", very good video about why C isn't actually a useless letter
@@kiefac immediately thought about that video when it was brought up here yeah
we should replace it with ç
since ç makes the ch sound
it would be perfect
@@kiefac i'm so glad jan misali has been brought up so quickly in the comments
I distinctly remember a time I went to Edinburgh to visit my family and while walking around the city I heard two people talking behind me and couldn't make out what they were saying. At first I thought they were speaking Korean but then I started to pick out sounds and words I recognized, it was then that I realized they were speaking English; they were speaking in such a deep Scottish accent that it took me a minute to realize it was actually English.
Fun fact, Scots is it's own recognised language. So when you don't understand us, you can use that as a valid excuse.
@@DrewPeabaws Given how it's been two or three years and I still remember the shock of realizing that they weren't speaking Korean I'm not surprised Scots is its own language.
I've always been able to understand a good 90% of what a Scottish person is saying. I found out later on my family came over from there and we live in an area that is primarily settled by Scottish folks. Even after my family being here 250 years there are still a lot of Scottish things my family still says.
Jaunt (used to be jawn); It means literally anything (a car, keys, events, a house, a place, etc).
For example: "Yo can yizzle fetch my jaunt real quick?" "Dids j'eet that jaunt?"
Other words: Drawlin', Scrapple (a delicacy), Wa-duh (water), replace "o" with "ah/ā" in any word you want, and pluralize everything (dids, youse, y'alls).
"Nah youse drawlin'. On God!" "Can yo grabs me a wa-duh?"
"The Devil is Beating His Wife" is what everybody I knows says if it rains while it's sunny. -Wisconsin
if i ever hear someone unironically say "the devil is beating his wife" while its sunny and raining i will probably breakdown laughing and they will be very concerned.
Good going, Persephone. Went and cheated your way to a beating, and now I'm sunburnt and wet.
I've only heard of it having a name once and it was from a substitute teacher saying that
There is a theoretical language called Anglish which removes all non-germanic influences from english and replaces all of the lost words with germanic equivalents. It makes a lot more sense than our actual language
it is certainly more Germanic. It doesn't necessarily make more sense. If English didn't make sense, we wouldn't be able to understand each other. Since we obviously can communicate, English makes sense.
@@sakamotosan1887 i wasn't talking about comprebility. Yeah, it makes as much sesne as any other foreign language as far as knowing the vocabulary goes. I mean that it was more logical and consistent. You don't have to deal with 20,000 exceptions to 1,000 rules like you do with English.
@@sakamotosan1887 How I was going to describe u...
Literally just read my name. 🤦🏻♂️
I dunno. English has been simplified to large extents by its constant clashes with, and suppression by, other languages. Likely the closest existing language to what you propose is Frisian. The Frisians, Anglos and Saxons were all neighbors speaking similar languages, and all three groups contributed significantly to the migration to Britain. The Saxon language developed into modern Low German, which has been heavily influenced by High German and other neighboring languages. Most of Jutland including Anglia switched to speaking Danish for a while before switching back to Low German. So the Frisian languages are pretty much all that's left of that language family in that area.
@@modulusshift no it has not been simplified. It has been overcomplicated by a lot. And I am not proposing this language. It already exists. Look it up.
in aus flip flops are called thongs, tradesmen are called traidies electrions are called sparkies carpenters are called chippies (so are hot chips) McDonalds is macas so is someone named Mackenzie someone named rick is razza and someone named Daniel is dazzo
Your response to Lemonade in the UK was my exact reaction to that little bite of lore.
As it relates to silent letters, these were almost always not silent at some point in history. Knife is now pronounced 'nife', but was originoally pronounced "k'nife" with an audible 'k'. People were too lazy to keep saying K so people just... dropped it
so that means the way grandmas pronounce scissors was actually the way it was originally said? haha
not k'nife. it comes from middle english. it would be called K'nEEFuh
@@tavrosnitram1529 my boyfriend's step mom also pronounces the c in scissors 🤣 it all makes sense now
@@lunarm0thh good point, but the original comment was talking about like 400 years ago rather than a couple generations
As a (Southern) Californian, I didn’t realize that there was a term for “when it rains while the sun is shining.” In fairness, the rain alone is just astonishing to us, so we were likely to spooked to even think about giving it a name… or maybe that’s just me.
Hailing from Wisconsin, I had no idea there were phrases for such a thing either. I don't think I'll start using any of the phrases too 😂
Eh your more south west then from Dixie, also if your from anywhere in the south or Dixie specifically at one point in your life you've heard " ah what a blessing, it looks like the devil is beating his wife" and have proceeded to burst out laughing
Here in Chicago we call a living room a front room
We had this place in Soldotna Alaska called Sourdough Sals, later I learned Sourdough is a term for a longtime Alaskan.
I bursted out laughing when the quiz said “poor boy” instead of “po’ boy” LOL
I'll fight a mofo if they call it a poor boy it's fucking po boy and you drink a 40 0z of steel reserve with it uncultured schmucks
I'm from Yorkshire over in England and we've got almost our own language. For one, we skip over about 54% of consonants when talking so words like "shouldn't" become "shun'" and "c*nt" sounds the same as "couldn't". Thanks to the Vikings we've got weird dialect-specific words and phrases like "yat" for "gate", and "addle some brass" meaning to "earn some money". We still use "thee" and "thou" but pronounce it as "thi" and "tha" (or "di" and "da" in some Sheffield speakers). We've got "owt" and "nowt" for "anything" and "nothing". Alleys between houses can be "jennels", "ginnels" or in the city of York they are "snickleways". Once, BBC Radio Sheffield localised the title of the song "I think I found myself a cheerleader" to "I think I found mysen a cheerleader". In general across the country, civil wars have been fought about whether to call a certain type of bread a bun, cob, bap, barm, barmcake, roll, breadcake or some other niche regional term. Sadly folks are using the dialect less and less over time and instead speaking standard British English with a bit of an accent but we still have a legacy of dialect poetry and literature.
The Yorkshire Motto, for those that can decipher it:
'ear all, see all, say now;
Ety all, sup all, pay nowt;
An' if ivver tha does owt fer nowt -
Di it for thissen!
i'm from suffolk. the strangest one i can think of is how we pronounce showed as shoe. for example; i shew you that yesterday. i also noticed how the name of a sandwich changes across areas. ive always called them sandwich and butties how ever i have been known to just call them rolls depending on the filling and type of bread
i think it’s something like:
‘Hear all, see all, say now;
Eat all, drink all, pay none;
And if you ever do anything for nothing;
Do it for yourself!’
translation obviously is far from perfect but i hope it’s pretty close
@@supermaximglitchy1 pretty close! I think "sup all" probably better translates to "drink all" but I'll have to check, and the last line is actually "do it for yourself" - "thissen" comes from "thy self"
This explains why younger me was so confused when I read the secret garden
I've never seen one comment represent one region so hard in a damn flood of comments from the US lol
I'm from Lancashire and I never get tired seeing some of the similarities and differences. Like we use owt and nowt, shun' and cun'. and then there's regional specific greetings like "reet cha?" meaning "are you alright mate?"
And then there's similarities to some of the slang seen on the quiz like for addressing a group of people, I'd say "you guys" "you lot" and "youse" which sounds more like "yiz" which has a bit of a crossover with the Scotts. And I was surprised to see "sarney" for a sub/baguette/roll sandwich, considering that's some staple Liverpudlian right there, which I can only assume was taken over because of the Irish link that both America and Liverpool share?
I say Kittercorner and when lazier, kiddercorner or kituhcorner. Though I interchange this with... wait for it - Adjacent, and sometimes even point to the corner I'm referring to and say that corner there when I'm feeling _REALLY_ daring.
calling soda "coke" is like calling the gamecube or the wii a "nintendo"
I love all the different phrases for sunshowers. I've always known them as "the devil is beating his wife" in English and "the devil's daughter is getting married" in Spanish. In France they say "the devil is beating his wife and marrying his daughter." In a lot of different languages it's something to do with different animals either giving birth or getting married. The most unique one I could find is that in Haiti they say "A zombie is beating his wife for salty food." It is pretty odd though that all across the world there is a consistent theme of either demons or animals having some sort of romantic interaction.
I'm from California and there's no term here. I wonder if they have one in Hawaii because it rains during sunny days so much their license plate is a rainbow.
I literally call it exactly what the question says, and I have never seen ANY of these
I grew up in Illinois, and the only two terms I heard were "the devil beating his wife" and a "Florida shower"
There probably is something even crazier in some hillbilly German village too
fun fact: it's called a bird course because ornithology 101 is really fucking easy and basically the original bird course
The bie is an extender to Free and does not have anything to do with a letter. So yep free A. Freebies is also the only one I've ever heard. xD
I can't stop looking at his glasses, the reflection of the screen looks like he has cartoon pupils
From my homeplace of Auckland; New Zealand, I am proud to present "Chur" meaning thank you. a common way this may be used "oh yeah, Chur bro" meaning thank you my valued compatriot I greatly appreciate your service/help in this trying time.
Unless I’m mistaken, “foxes’ wedding” is actually a common term for sun showers in a lot of cultures around the globe, as foxes are often associated with trickery.
True! in japan if theres a sun shower on your wedding day a fox will impersonate your wife if im remembering correctly!
@@littlelady9801 casually insulting neighboring countries. I like that. Sort of like "Dutch treat" and "French disease" in English.
To be completely fair to the word “naive”, it’s borrowed from French and is originally spelled “naïve”, the letter ï being pronounced as a double E (such as in green). So it’s pronounced “na-eev” for that reason.
But I do agree, English is a very dumb language.
Why blame anglos for stupid language stuff when Frenchies fucked it up more for them.
I always thought the ï is basically just a way to shorten down two "i" sounds into one. So Nai-iv, with each I being a part of a separate syllable. Cool to know thos.
@@Sassaparilla it's because it would be pronounced nehv (again, in French) if it had a simple I instead of a ï.
Most ridiculous English spellings were indeed inflicted by the French, as revenge for the 100 Years War.
I always called the last one "Dry Rain" but to be fair, that makes no sense now that I'm thinking of it.
Literally the only phrase/word I've heard for rain falling while the sun is shining is the devil beating his wife. I've always thought that was weird as shit, I'm glad that most of the other terms for it are equally insane.
I've questioned the English language ever since I was a kid. My mom has told me that when I was little she taught me how to say the word knight, and I said it with a k-sound because why else would it be there? But then mom reminded me of the existence of silent letters with another example being knife (which I never pronounced the same way as knight), and I begrudgingly agreed with her (but I didn't like it).
The "k" in "knight" used to be pronounced, but then English people stopped, but kept the spelling the same.
14:08 I was dying when I realized that she met the criteria, and then you said this, and I started laughing even harder
The inside out sphere reference got me good there
In South Africa we call it "Fox is marrying Wolf's wife" when it rains while the sun is out.
“Oh bless your heart” Sounds nice to hear, but it actually means the person who said it to you thinks you’re slow/stupid.
Not always, but yes, it can mean that. It can also be used as a way to talk badly about somebody.
"Bless her heart, but she really can't cook well at all."
Sometimes someone might say it genuinely, like “Becky’s husband passed yesterday,’ ‘oh bless her heart’” is how I’ve heard it before
as a southern woman i can say that it doesnt always mean that -- its meant in a genuine way and only assholes have ruined that.
As someone who knows some French I can confirm that Huggbees’s pronunciation of “quatre” is 100% correct
As a fellow French speaking person I can confirm it is definitely correct
"What do you call an easy high school/college class?"
A class?
Fun fact: one of Missouri’s unique words, Hoosier (a word for redneck) came from when the Chrysler factory strike happened and they flew in people from Indiana to scab.
I'm Canadian, and apparently a hooded sweater, which I would call a "hoody" is often called a "bunny hug" in other parts of Canada. That one is also very internet searchable.
Also Canadian. Once I went to Florida to visit family. It was winter, but although Florida doesn't get snow, the weather still gets nasty. One day, it was pretty windy, and I didn't pack a coat on the trip because I figured it'd be warm. And the relative who I was visiting asked me if I packed a "windbreaker." My 12-year-old brain went like "isn't that what you call someone who farts?" I've never heard that term before. Probably a non-Canadian term.
@@Diriector_Doc funny actually, windbreaker is common I think, here on the east coast! But Canada probably has about as much variation as the US
@@Diriector_Doc as a Floridian, I’ve only heard sweatshirt and hoodie, but I wouldn’t be surprised if some people in Florida did call it that.
Lots of people call them sweatshirts in Colorado, and whenever I hear that I think sweater, I've heard both a decent amount though
Okay, so the "carbonated beverage" question hits home. I call it soda, like a normal person from Oregon (yes I'ma wear that's an oxymoron), but my mom, who is also from Oregon, always calls everything "pop" and I take it personally
@@themichael3410My wife is from Oregon and she has a distinct accent that's similar to my friend who lives in Vancouver BC so it's all just the cascadia accent to me.
@@themichael3410 thats a weird hill to die on since its literally a Sodapop. To rather call every thing coke than the other half is pretty stupud
I'ma wear? It's I'm aware, unless you were about to tell me what clothes you planned on wearing.
i wanted to take the quiz for shits and giggles but the new york times wants me to subscribe to them before i can
There’s always Yoopers and Trolls (Yoopers live in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and those in the lower Peninsula are Trolls since we live “under” the Mackinac Bridge)
Apparently I somehow mixed up and said "Yinz" is from Philadelphia when I meant to say it's from Pennsylvania, primarily due to it mostly being used in western cities like Pittsburg. I think I got confused on its origin when juggling Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh, and Philadelphia in my head.
If you're looking for an apology. Come on bro, it's a comedy video about goofy ways people talk.
If you're looking for a kiss, now I know you're my kind of person.
I'm not in your walls btw
You are one of the best youtubers
i want a hug
Yeah. Youse is Philly, yinz is Pittsburgh.
I legit got mad when he said 'yinz' was from philly. It's part of fucking pittsburghese for fucks sake