Being a 2 year old from Antarctica, I'm surprised by how easy these questions were. I guess my penguin teachers are just too op, can't wait to get into Harvard.
@@h3llboyyy407 when you are good at Math you tend to be good at other science subject# as well since they use the same brain mechanism ( calculating, imagination and logical thinking)
@@batuayde2074 YES OMG THAT WAS SO EASY AND THEY COULDN’T FIGURE IT OUT, I WAS LITERALLY SPEECHLESS, its ok for the dropouts but, if she did the first equation that fast, she is for sure studying something related to math and doing that without know the basis of physics is not the best
I'm curious how accurate it is, because for me, a European, most of these questions (especially higher grades) were rather fun facts than actual knowledge required from us during our education 🤔
@@vivalus I mean I also didn’t >know< some of them, because it wasn’t required, moreover, it wasn’t present in the textbooks. Even if, it was marked as an additional knowledge (thing that you don’t need to remember)
Can this be a series? Jesse and Kennedy are so funny together Edit: I just meant they’d be a funny comedy duo & not shipping. Thanks for the 20k likes guys!
@@kamanyekuakauari8636 well they are popular actors on UA-cam but I never seen this guys in UA-cam because I like technological and quiz type of vedeos
well if you were to say, they play outside, i understand why outside becomes a part of an adverb since it describes an action of place ; "where". just like "the dog was still barking outside" the dog, subject was/barking verb, and outside which apparently is an adverb of place, which describes the barking action. but referring to the person as they said above, we went to Baltimore to play with rats on the outside. on the outside is still a noun but with additional prepositional phrase wouldnt it? or perhaps, was he stating a general characteristic on its formation and its behaviour when applied to different contexts?
Not necessarily easy math- advanced students often take honors or AP classes in high school that is markedly harder than common core math for their grade level, for example. As the fight for getting into a good uni continues though, more and more students are getting into AP classes and, as a whole, taking a more challenging curriculum.
@@adr77510 you're right. Greece is really fa behind regarding issues like this. the government only wants students to focus on subjects like this and don't really show interest in what we are actually good at or what we like and prefer. recently they took music, art and theater away from high schools cause they are considered "not important" since "being an artist is not a real job". really sucks :/
Being a college drop out doesn't mean you're less intelligent or knowledgeable. My husband never finished college purely because he's not a school person. 10/10 he's the smartest person in the room. In high school he would sleep through class and never do homework. He would show up on test day, not even realize it was test day, and score 100%. His intelligence drives me absolutely nuts because he doesn't even have to try, yet he almost flunked high school from purely putting in zero effort. His brain is absolutely fascinating. He loves to research different aspects of topics, has a photographic memory, and 152 IQ.
yeah but this vid is a test of knowledge not intelligence- intelligence would be things like pattern recognition and it's stuff ur born w and just how ur brain is
@@netocka4391 yup it was a combo of questions which tested intelligence, as well as knowledge. Like the math ones were logical and practical, whereas the geographical were knowledge based
This video just goes to show that even if they go to Harvard, Americans couldn’t correctly answer geography questions if their lives depended on it. edit: was a joke be quiet
Here's how to figure out the gravity question: - Bilbo is 2m tall - So if the TOP of his head reached 3m when he jumped on Planet A, that means, he jumped 1m high. - The gravity of Planet A is 10 m/s². - The gravity of Planet B is 2 m/s²...5 times LESS gravity. - So Bilbo can jump 5 times higher. - Instead of 1m, he can jump 5m in the air. - He is 2m tall, so the top of his head is 7m in the air. - Question answered :)
Also (umm just in case you were curious!!!) why is gravity is measured in units of "meters per second-squared?" (Like it said, Planet A has a gravity of 10 m/s².) Because, gravity is measured in terms of how fast a falling object *accelerates.* For example, Earth's gravity is 9.8 m/s², meaning that for every second an object is falling, its speed increases by 9.8 meters per second. Now, if you just thought to yourself, "What do you mean 'for every second...per second'?" I agree, it's confusing wording. But it is to get across the point that it isn't just 9.8 meters fallen at second 1, 19.6 at second 2, 29.4 at second 3. Instead, it is 9.8 meters fallen at second 1, 9.8 + (9.8 + 9.8) = 29.4 at second 2, 29.4 + (9.8 + 9.8 + 9.8) = 58.8 at second 3. Got it? For every second, its speed increases by 9.8 meters PER SECOND. The speed is exponential, not just falling 9.8 m/s. :) If that doesn't explain why the units of measurement are m/s², you can also think of it this way: Acceleration = Change in Velocity / Change in Time. So, since velocity's unit of measurement is m/s (meters per second, aka speed basically), then acceleration is (m/s) / s. AKA, m/s². None of what I just said is actually important to answering the question technically...Only to understand the concepts :)
I can't believe that the Harvard students won. It's almost like they're smarter than social media influencers. Edit: to everyone hating because I spoiled it, realize that it was your idea to check the comments before reaching the end.
YES THANKYOU! Its a sub colour of violet and is nearly idistinguishable from violet to the human eye. It's like saying aqua should be in ROYGBV. I heard that it was potentially added due to there being 6 colours and adding indigo made it 7, a more holy number.
As much I dislike a tiktoker being a job, it is objectively true that it is a job. The definition of a job is: a paid position of regular employment. Which is exactly what doing tiktok could be.
English is my third language... and I remember being around 10 years old and treated like I was dumb because I didn't know "are" was part of the "be" verb. I've never forgotten about it ever since.
have attacked is also the present perfect tense of " to attack" , not 2 separate verbs and they listed outside as a noun when it was an adverb ive had english as a 2nd language in a european country, they teach u this stuff in school
@@laylammorais sometimes, it really gets me all flabbergasted whenever a native gets their own language "wrong" (be it spelling or grammar). no offense intended, btw. it's just in foreign schools, these are all taught and there are a bunch of rules to follow. so in my head I was thinking, "how come people who speak english as their native language gets it wrong? who made all these rules?"... and then came to the conclusion that them speaking it as their native language is the very reason why they don't need to necessarily learn it anymore.
5:47 at this point of view the right answer should be given to Harvard team because Joanna raised the issue of authenticity of that question, and you just gave 5 points to Kennedy and Jessie by random rock-paper-scissors...
My stepmom went to Harvard as a bio major. She is smart as heck. These people are on her level of academics which is amazingly rare. Nice to see the kind of people she once contended with
3:30 earth is divided in 2 hemispheres. I'm guessing the answer of 4 comes from north/south, west/east. But these are 2 different divisions and the earth is divided in 2 in both of them. "hemisphere" literally comes from "hemi = half" "sphaira = sphere" The harvard guy was right.
So was the Harvard girl about Indonesia. They even asked a following question about the 5 largest country, mentioned Indonesia and not Japan...and yet whoever prepped these questions didnt get it 🤦🏻♀️
Joanna was right in saying Antarctic Ocean because the Southern Ocean is also known as the Antarctic Ocean, that's how we learnt it in school in South Africa. Loved the video by the way :)
In a vacuum I would have said it wasn't a verb, but in this context I knew it had to be a verb. "Eggs are my obsession" is a complete sentence by itself and I know that every complete sentence MUST have a verb. Glad we were proven right!
@@creepincreepy261 I thought that at first but apparently they were actually right about “we” not being a noun. Pronouns don’t count as nouns even though the word noun is in “pronouns”. Nouns are either common nouns (non specific things) or proper nouns (specific things). The name Sarah is a proper noun, the word friends is a common noun, and they can both be replaced by the pronoun “we” like this: _My name is Jimmy. I went to school with my sisters Sarah, Debra, and my friends. We all went on a school trip._ The “we” replaced multiple nouns but isn’t a noun itself.
Smartness doesn't consist only of academics. It is also about being witty, money-wise and having social intelligence among other things. A competition of testing smartness should have a way to test these skills as well.
Producer said "there are 4hemispheres" Harvard student said "hemi means two" and Jesse didnt even know what he was answering he just said "four" what a great video.. btw Hemi means HALF lol
I paused the video just to scroll down and upvote every comment that understands the concept of "HEMI = Half" and "SPHERE = (well...Sphere)". I.E. Earth can only be cut into TWO half spheres. +1 for you.😁
I don't even get where the heck they got that number 4 from... it says 2 if you just google it but more importantly: you just know what hemisphere means from idk... literally talking to people about the world!?...
6:54 The Harvard team definitely should have gotten this point. "Outside" was used as an adverb in that sentence, not as a noun, plus the dropout team said "Moods clothing," a phrase which includes both a noun and an adjective. /lighthearted, I just love grammar lol
I think rather than using a buzzer which partially makes the results based on who has a better reaction time, it would have been better if they wrote down their answers and showed them later and just had the points tallied up at the end to see who got the most points, so they can see how many each team got right overall.
When Kevin said New Zealand I just lost it. I'm from New Zealand and I never thought I would ever hear anyone say that New Zealand is large or high populated. We have a population of only 5 million! that's less than 1/13th the population of the UK and the UK is smaller than New Zealand! I am dying🤣🤣
6:54 Joana was right Outside isnt a noun, its an adverbial noun (noun that functions as an adverb, making outside an adverb) Also Moods should be an adjective modifying clothing. Moods clothing is def not a compound noun because you would find it in the dictionary.
Many problems with this one: 1. "are" is a verb. 2. “outside” can be an adjective, adverb or noun depending on its usage in the sentence. 3. As another commenter already said: "hemisphere" literally comes from "hemi = half" and "sphaira = sphere" => so by definition of the word itself there can only be two, any other answer must be false. Do your research, guys.
There's two main ways that we commonl dissect the Earth for geographic purposes. One is along the equator (northern/southern) and the other is along the prime meridian which is why our coordinate system includes east/west for longitude and north/south for latitude.
So many wrong answers by the host in this. "Have" is a verb. "Moods" in "Moods clothing" is an adjective not a noun. "Hominids" are a taxonomic classification which include humans and the Great Apes, so the question asked (Whether hominids evolved into humans one million years ago.) makes no sense. Technically the answer is yes, since members of the Family Hominidae have existed for 17 million years.
you're right abt a hemisphere being the half of a sphere but the equator isn't the only line that divides the earth into two halves the prime meridian does the same so in that way we do get 4 but then again the question was a little ambiguous....
1. The answer to the hemispheres question should have been 2. Yes, you could argue there *exists* 4 hemispheres, but you cannot *divide* the earth into 4 hemispheres. Once you choose a direction(north-south or east-west), that's it, you can't have both at the same time. There is no way you can get 4 half-spheres out of a single sphere(Banach-Tarski paradox notwithstanding) 2. The longitude question has several issues. First, unlike the equator the prime meridian does not go all the way around the earth, therefore it does not fully cut the earth in half. On the other side of the prime meridian you have 180 degrees longitude also known as the international date line. If we pretend that a half-cut is as good as a full-cut then we have an even bigger problem. The equator is special in that it is the only line of latitude that lies on a great-circle and thus divides the earth into equal haves. There is nothing special about the prime meridian it's just an arbitrary point we chose, every single line of longitude lies on a great circle so the answer in this case would be every line of longitude.
If there are 4 hemispheres possible there are infinite of hemispheres possible, you can divide the Earth in two wherever you want lol, this question was so stupid
@@diogoferreira7427 its an island nation tho right? bc its an archipelago? anyway indonesia should be right assuming archapelago counts because its like double japans pop. so many questions had the wrong answers for this it makes me like actually pissed
Personally, I feel like you can’t really compare both of these students, because one decided to go to the next level of learning to learn everything that possibly could be learned, and the other one decided to take a step back from worldly learning, and went more to UA-cam learning, I guess you can call it so if the questions were a mixture between digital creator and worldly questions I think they both would come and close because you didn’t really give a fair advantage especially with the drop outs.
Just to make common people understand: ( The dropouts can answer the general knowledge questions which anyone of us can quickly answer too but the Harvard students trash them when it comes to analysis and technical questions ) This is where education shows its edge because, as a dropout you have to be street smart to succeed in life.
@@Tom_HopeCore i didnt say he was dumb but his answer sort of was (do americans not have geography class im genuinely confused) and obviously it doesnt mean he's not intelligent, intelligence is way more that the questions in the video, this was just a lighthearted comment
AYOOOOO I met Kevin once during a student government thing and from our few interactions he seemed like one of the sweetest and most genuine people ever!!! And we stan west African kings😤
As an 13 year old student from India who knew the answers even to the 12th grade questions I was surprised to find out that I am a genius and can join Harvard.
Hate that people are judging these peoples character based on their looks. These people seem really nice and like they had a great time playing this game against each other! Everyone has different reasons for their life taking the path it took, no reason to judge people for it.
One more for the road, Kennedy should get out of her comfort zone for the channel and go into the public areas, ask to draw other people in their natural state or natural surroundings. Probably interesting enough if she was willing.
@@udontevenwannaknowbruv I've found the opposite to be true. The anxiety in people only grew if they got their so called safe spaces and took themselves out of life. They got more and more sensitive and less self confident. Which absolutely makes sense, since we all grow on challenges and rather not on everything going our way. Talking in general here and not for a certain individual.
I like this content a lot. Stereotypical looking popular kids vs nerd kids actually interacting and showing that it's all stereotypes is just so wholesome. I actually find that they are both smart just different priorities.
@@ANTO-ln5rp the math was rlly simple, solving it in seconds is easy. i applaud her more for being able to do it without looking at it bc personally id forget it in a second
@@ANTO-ln5rp dividing 22 by 2 will take you 1 second and if u dont what added to 8 gives u 11 then u dont deserve to be in high school even, forget college. u will find it harder ofcourse if u try doing it the 2x+16=22 way
@@nikita-vp7ms girl💀 you missed my point "u dont deserve to be in high school" at least for me its easy elementary maths, but i cant resolve it mentally or in seconds. Thats it...
In the 6th grade question “outside” was used as an adverb modifying the verb “played”. So in this context, “outside” was not a noun and should not have been counted as such, even though the word “outside” can be used as a noun in other situations.
That question is simple but depends on the way you think of it.. we all know that 2x11=22 and the question says 2(x+8)=22 which means "x+8" must be equal to 11 therefore the answer is equal to 3 ordinary people see the question as 2(x+8)=22 but real mathematicians see it as 11-8=X
I disagree re. "Moods". It's not an adjective, it forms a compound noun with "clothing" -- it's just that the English orthography insists on spelling most compound nouns as separate words.
@@desiree7633 there’s no such thing as “mathematical thinking”, it’s not a sense in itself. I think what you mean is logical (or critical) thinking. Actually being more of a creative thinker can be an amazing thing in science. It’s really inaccurate to think science is just about logic
@@yungmun4155 There is no such thing as mathematical thinking? really? just put it this way, math quantifies, and logic clarifies. Math is only useful for matters dealing with numbers and logic is useful for all matter and is basically a creative thought process. Logic is prone to errors due to intuitive false premise, while math is prone to errors of intuitive false conclusions. Also, mathematical thinking is a rigorous step by step process that can only go forward, meanwhile logic includes deduction (forward) and induction (backwards) process, therefore using logic you can solve problems such as criminal investigations or trouble shooting problems. In other words, they complement each other at some point, but they are very different types of thinking (you don't take into account pemdas when solving a murder case ;) ). Also, how is it inaccurate to think that science is all about logic? I thought the scientific method was a rational, logical thought process that was used to figure out facts and truths based on evidence and ability to prove the results. Please elaborate :)
I think the question about the ante penultimate was the easiest for Spanish speakers, because you do not use the word ultimate, you use last, but we use “Última”. So we also use the other 2 (penúltima & antepenúltima) in our daily vocab.
@@enderdragonkilr The question in the video was most populated island country in East Asia, so It couldn’t be China. But the most populated East Asian country in general is China though so you were still somewhat right.
14:04 I got this question right......here are the calculations Let H=height of Bilbo Ja=the actual height Bilbo jumped on planet A Jb=actual height jumped by Bilbo JHa=the height Bilbo reached with his head on planet A Jhb=the height Bilbo reached with his head on planet B A=acceleration on planet A B=acceleration on planet B So Ja=JHa-H =3-2 =1m Thus Ja/A=Jb/B 1m/10m/s.s=Jb/2m/s.s Jb×10m/s.s=2m.m/s.s Jb=5m But we are asked what Jhb is so Jhb=H+Jb =2m+5m =7m So the answer is 7 meters . . . .u'r welcome
It's much easier with one of the 4 1D motion equations. Let the primary velocity be u, terminal velocity v , acceleration a and displacement S Then we get the equation:- v²= u²-2aS Now for the first case, a is 10m/s² and S is 1m as (Bilbo is 2 m tall and after the jump he reached the height of 3m from the planet surface, then the displacement by his bottom of feet is (3-2)m that is 1m), and v is zero(as the velocity is zero at the highest point he reached by jumping) Therefore, 0 = u² - 2×10×1 Or, u²=20 Now in the second case, (with the exact jump means his primary velocity is same) u²= 20 , a is 2m/s² , and v is zero Therefore we get, 0 = 20 - 2×2S Or, S = 5 m Now , the displacement by his head is (5+2)m = 7m
Yes, "are" is a verb. Specifically, it's a form of the verb "to be" and is used as the present tense for the plural subjects (e.g., "They are," "We are") and for the second-person singular subject (e.g., "You are").
At first i was like howd she do the math so fast, but i realized how after i thought about it and there are really easier/ different ways to get an answer fast especially if you have your times tables down!! Honestly opening my eyes so now i can solve faster too
The discussion about "are" being a verb or not made me lose faith in the school system lol
Right i thought everyone knew that?
yeah its a verb
Is, was, are, were.. are verbs.
A verb is any word that describes what a subject is doing or being.
@@bebizambi392 Fr? 😭
Next time you should do "Harvard students vs European eight grader"
I say 6th graders 😂
or asian kindergatner
You do realize that Harvard largest population is Asian
Exactlyyyyy
But being Asian has nothing to do with being raised in the educational system of the US which is awful, way more than Europe’s.
Being a 2 year old from Antarctica, I'm surprised by how easy these questions were. I guess my penguin teachers are just too op, can't wait to get into Harvard.
Underrated 💀 bruh
Ok man
Dang bro Im moving to Antarctica rn
@@Ch0iB30mgyu fr
999 iq
I love how fun this was. No pressure no hard feelings.
It’s obvious. I am the smartest person alive.
I’m very proud of your effort
Def let’s go Jesse 💪💪
Obviously
we all know it
Yep👌
the Harvard girl is the smartest person in the room. by far.
No I 👎👎👎
at math ! we don't know the full extent tho of either of them maybe other dude was a history nerd
@@h3llboyyy407 and astronomy, spelling, geology, grammar, physics, geography, literature, and linguistics.
@@h3llboyyy407 when you are good at Math you tend to be good at other science subject# as well since they use the same brain mechanism ( calculating, imagination and logical thinking)
@@williamvn2928 yeah and that's just science lol
Joanna killed it in calculation..
Not in physics
@@batuayde2074 tbh they were so far ahead I think they were just giving them a chance xD
That equation was so easy though I did it in 6th grade
@@batuayde2074 YES OMG THAT WAS SO EASY AND THEY COULDN’T FIGURE IT OUT, I WAS LITERALLY SPEECHLESS, its ok for the dropouts but, if she did the first equation that fast, she is for sure studying something related to math and doing that without know the basis of physics is not the best
those were simple calculations..
I never knew this video would revitalise my mind the way it did. It made me realise just how fun knowing stuff is.
I'm curious how accurate it is, because for me, a European, most of these questions (especially higher grades) were rather fun facts than actual knowledge required from us during our education 🤔
im over here and i dont even remember 4th grade crap. please give me these fun facts
@@vivalus I mean I also didn’t >know< some of them, because it wasn’t required, moreover, it wasn’t present in the textbooks. Even if, it was marked as an additional knowledge (thing that you don’t need to remember)
what??? aren't fun facts actual knowledge bruh wym
lmao
@@h3llboyyy407 nailed it
@@marianejadepepito3719 haha like wtf am i missing something 😅 XD
Can this be a series? Jesse and Kennedy are so funny together
Edit: I just meant they’d be a funny comedy duo & not shipping. Thanks for the 20k likes guys!
yaaaas
*YESSS PLEASE*
Yea fr, I think that Jesse actually looks more happy with Kennedy instead of Claudia, claudia barely speaks
@@mawedits4972 savage
@@mawedits4972 Kennedy and Jesse are more combatible, they should date
the fact that the dropouts look like generic bullies is so funny to me
shit 12K?
Like dude they look like the popular kids in every movie and the others look like total nerds 💯😂
@@kamanyekuakauari8636 well they are popular actors on UA-cam but I never seen this guys in UA-cam because I like technological and quiz type of vedeos
fr
@@kamanyekuakauari8636 I'm smart and muscular pussy
Yea, is a sign that they are not educated.
7:05 - While outside is a noun if you were to say for instance: on the outside. However in this case it was being used as an adverb.
How?
@@watersheep1194 Yes, because it modifies a verb, in this case "plays". It shows how they "play": they play "outside". So it makes it an adverb.
well if you were to say, they play outside, i understand why outside becomes a part of an adverb since it describes an action of place ; "where". just like "the dog was still barking outside" the dog, subject was/barking verb, and outside which apparently is an adverb of place, which describes the barking action. but referring to the person as they said above, we went to Baltimore to play with rats on the outside. on the outside is still a noun but with additional prepositional phrase wouldnt it? or perhaps, was he stating a general characteristic on its formation and its behaviour when applied to different contexts?
I was looking for this comment!
Nerd!
Just kidding.
being raised in Greece where our education system is way too strict and difficult, I'm always jealous of how easy math are in America:"))
US schools prioritize the humanities far more than math so maybe that's why
Not necessarily easy math- advanced students often take honors or AP classes in high school that is markedly harder than common core math for their grade level, for example.
As the fight for getting into a good uni continues though, more and more students are getting into AP classes and, as a whole, taking a more challenging curriculum.
not really
relate I live in turkey and in this area math is so different than theirs
@@adr77510 you're right. Greece is really fa behind regarding issues like this. the government only wants students to focus on subjects like this and don't really show interest in what we are actually good at or what we like and prefer. recently they took music, art and theater away from high schools cause they are considered "not important" since "being an artist is not a real job". really sucks :/
Being a college drop out doesn't mean you're less intelligent or knowledgeable. My husband never finished college purely because he's not a school person. 10/10 he's the smartest person in the room. In high school he would sleep through class and never do homework. He would show up on test day, not even realize it was test day, and score 100%. His intelligence drives me absolutely nuts because he doesn't even have to try, yet he almost flunked high school from purely putting in zero effort. His brain is absolutely fascinating. He loves to research different aspects of topics, has a photographic memory, and 152 IQ.
yeah but this vid is a test of knowledge not intelligence- intelligence would be things like pattern recognition and it's stuff ur born w and just how ur brain is
@@randomkid7672 ok but the title is who is smarter
Nd mine has a 5 inches long have a nice day mate UwU
@@netocka4391 yup it was a combo of questions which tested intelligence, as well as knowledge. Like the math ones were logical and practical, whereas the geographical were knowledge based
Your husband sounds like a genius
This video just goes to show that even if they go to Harvard, Americans couldn’t correctly answer geography questions if their lives depended on it.
edit: was a joke be quiet
Fr lol, I thought it was just a stereotype about Americans
@@justjoanneofficial It's true except for some of us like me.
@@babaelijah6590 ohhh ok
As an American I could tell you ever single country in the world. Some of us know more than anyone else.
@@igotwect3174 wise words
“ 5 + 2 “ “ Seven “ “HOW DID YOU KNOW THAT”
😂😂😂
Here's how to figure out the gravity question:
- Bilbo is 2m tall
- So if the TOP of his head reached 3m when he jumped on Planet A, that means, he jumped 1m high.
- The gravity of Planet A is 10 m/s².
- The gravity of Planet B is 2 m/s²...5 times LESS gravity.
- So Bilbo can jump 5 times higher.
- Instead of 1m, he can jump 5m in the air.
- He is 2m tall, so the top of his head is 7m in the air.
- Question answered :)
Also (umm just in case you were curious!!!) why is gravity is measured in units of "meters per second-squared?" (Like it said, Planet A has a gravity of 10 m/s².)
Because, gravity is measured in terms of how fast a falling object *accelerates.* For example, Earth's gravity is 9.8 m/s², meaning that for every second an object is falling, its speed increases by 9.8 meters per second.
Now, if you just thought to yourself, "What do you mean 'for every second...per second'?" I agree, it's confusing wording. But it is to get across the point that it isn't just 9.8 meters fallen at second 1, 19.6 at second 2, 29.4 at second 3.
Instead, it is 9.8 meters fallen at second 1, 9.8 + (9.8 + 9.8) = 29.4 at second 2, 29.4 + (9.8 + 9.8 + 9.8) = 58.8 at second 3. Got it? For every second, its speed increases by 9.8 meters PER SECOND. The speed is exponential, not just falling 9.8 m/s. :)
If that doesn't explain why the units of measurement are m/s², you can also think of it this way:
Acceleration = Change in Velocity / Change in Time.
So, since velocity's unit of measurement is m/s (meters per second, aka speed basically), then acceleration is (m/s) / s. AKA, m/s².
None of what I just said is actually important to answering the question technically...Only to understand the concepts :)
@@Allison_Hart Damn! I just learnt more from you than I did with my teachers this semester in college! Thanks
That's a tall hobbit
For a second I thought he jumped the 3m total and I was thinking he could jump 15m
Did I just learn something from the UA-cam comment section? Obviously something is wrong with the UA-cam algorithm today 😂
I can't believe that the Harvard students won. It's almost like they're smarter than social media influencers.
Edit: to everyone hating because I spoiled it, realize that it was your idea to check the comments before reaching the end.
Sarcasm
@@gemimailunga9647 no shit Sherlock
@@gemimailunga9647 no need to point out that its sarcasm you cringe mofo
Ikr so shocking
I honestly don't know how they won, I can't believe they're Harvard students. Makes me think I'll easily get accepted into Harvard as a European.
Btw, indigo got taken out the official rainbow colors a while ago. So the Harvard guy actually got it right
True, was already ROYGBV
YES THANKYOU! Its a sub colour of violet and is nearly idistinguishable from violet to the human eye. It's like saying aqua should be in ROYGBV. I heard that it was potentially added due to there being 6 colours and adding indigo made it 7, a more holy number.
forget indigo I thought you were supposed to call violet purple 🧍♀️
why do they have to remove it?? to confuse me? a dumb citizen
Exactly 🤦♀️
Walsh immediately saying that being a TikToker is not a job immediately raised my respect for her, knowing of her existence for 2 seconds
As much I dislike a tiktoker being a job, it is objectively true that it is a job. The definition of a job is: a paid position of regular employment. Which is exactly what doing tiktok could be.
How is she solving math that quickly damn I’m impressed
High IQ and Math skills
@@demonslayer-ds9vo or acting skills
Video is edited.
It's basic algebra..
Because it's not hard
The fact that they literally discussed whether "are" is a verb or not hurt me ahaha
Same 😭
same like im in 6th grade i knew some of these Like what
Bro these are Americans, their school curriculum is delayed by 5 years
same, I got so angry
English is my third language... and I remember being around 10 years old and treated like I was dumb because I didn't know "are" was part of the "be" verb. I've never forgotten about it ever since.
As an English tutor, it was physically painful to hear "are is not a verb" 😭
have attacked is also the present perfect tense of " to attack" , not 2 separate verbs
and they listed outside as a noun when it was an adverb
ive had english as a 2nd language in a european country, they teach u this stuff in school
@@UserName-hr5wb Yeah, I've just realised being a native doesn't exactly mean they know what a verb is 😅
It's a linking verb technically, but still 😭
@@laylammorais sometimes, it really gets me all flabbergasted whenever a native gets their own language "wrong" (be it spelling or grammar). no offense intended, btw. it's just in foreign schools, these are all taught and there are a bunch of rules to follow. so in my head I was thinking, "how come people who speak english as their native language gets it wrong? who made all these rules?"... and then came to the conclusion that them speaking it as their native language is the very reason why they don't need to necessarily learn it anymore.
@@plobclop you mean auxiliary
Next time try Harvard students vs 5 year old Asian kids
Harvard students don't stand a chance.
Forr reall @@rangedx1536
I’m mostly Asian and my parents got mad when I learnt calculus at 13 because they thought I was too late😭
@@ThatCanadianGuy happens to the best of us 😭😭
Nah Harvard have a lot of Asian even daughter of xi jinping study there
I love how calm Joanna is.
She's shown the perfect example of " How to use your brain and be cool at the same time"?
Yeah, She's cool😎
L pfp
more who never developed social skills
@@tosmok atleast she aint yappin all the time
@@gdstar6917 yea
I STAN KENNEDY AND JESSE'S CHAOTIC ENERGY!!
Love them 😂😂
Same
They’re so funny!!
He dated the wrong sister lol
@@henrybal3052 Don’t make it weird. Jesse and Kennedy get along as friends. Jesse and Claudia are happy together.
5:47 at this point of view the right answer should be given to Harvard team because Joanna raised the issue of authenticity of that question, and you just gave 5 points to Kennedy and Jessie by random rock-paper-scissors...
bro they crushed them by over 100points, why ya gotta be so strict lol
@@Paco_RL but it wasn't fair for that question
I agree. Joanna was right, have is a verb. That question honestly pissed me off
@@Paco_RL it's a game so chill
And "outside" as a noun in another question... XD
My stepmom went to Harvard as a bio major. She is smart as heck. These people are on her level of academics which is amazingly rare. Nice to see the kind of people she once contended with
3:30
earth is divided in 2 hemispheres.
I'm guessing the answer of 4 comes from north/south, west/east. But these are 2 different divisions and the earth is divided in 2 in both of them.
"hemisphere" literally comes from "hemi = half" "sphaira = sphere"
The harvard guy was right.
So was the Harvard girl about Indonesia. They even asked a following question about the 5 largest country, mentioned Indonesia and not Japan...and yet whoever prepped these questions didnt get it 🤦🏻♀️
@@Enne- Japan is the right answer not Indonesia because Indonesia isn't an east asia country its a south east asia
@@Enne- indonesia isnt an east asia country, cos i live in here
rightttt
@@Enne- the question was the largest populated east Asian island :/ so yeah the the answer is Japan
brandon looked so supportive and hyped with everyone’s correct answers you love to see it
Joanna was right in saying Antarctic Ocean because the Southern Ocean is also known as the Antarctic Ocean, that's how we learnt it in school in South Africa. Loved the video by the way :)
Yah she is right
Yap. Was looking for this comment.
same I learnt that in Australian school
In Latin America we also call it the Antartic Ocean
Same tbh. We never call it south ocean lol
Jesse would have absolutely mopped the floor if this was a drawing competition.
Team Asia: “are is a verb.”
Team America: “no it’s not.”
Asia wins.
So glad she said this bc it was killing me inside when the question came up.
In a vacuum I would have said it wasn't a verb, but in this context I knew it had to be a verb. "Eggs are my obsession" is a complete sentence by itself and I know that every complete sentence MUST have a verb. Glad we were proven right!
@@MaskOfCinder Not only that, but in the noun question. "We" should've been one of the answers since "we" is a pronoun.
@@creepincreepy261 I thought that at first but apparently they were actually right about “we” not being a noun. Pronouns don’t count as nouns even though the word noun is in “pronouns”. Nouns are either common nouns (non specific things) or proper nouns (specific things). The name Sarah is a proper noun, the word friends is a common noun, and they can both be replaced by the pronoun “we” like this:
_My name is Jimmy. I went to school with my sisters Sarah, Debra, and my friends. We all went on a school trip._
The “we” replaced multiple nouns but isn’t a noun itself.
Outside should be an adverb. @@creepincreepy261
@@MaskOfCinder Thank you for that. I was also confused about this
Smartness doesn't consist only of academics. It is also about being witty, money-wise and having social intelligence among other things. A competition of testing smartness should have a way to test these skills as well.
There is also creativity, which is another form of intelligence.
And emotional intellegence
Smartness……
Yea, less people only know this. Specially school always shape people and believe tests is all about smartness of academics
Spoiler alert, just good grades won't get you into Harvard
Producer said "there are 4hemispheres" Harvard student said "hemi means two" and Jesse didnt even know what he was answering he just said "four" what a great video.. btw Hemi means HALF lol
I paused the video just to scroll down and upvote every comment that understands the concept of "HEMI = Half" and "SPHERE = (well...Sphere)". I.E. Earth can only be cut into TWO half spheres. +1 for you.😁
I don't even get where the heck they got that number 4 from... it says 2 if you just google it but more importantly: you just know what hemisphere means from idk... literally talking to people about the world!?...
@@kjrey9878it can be cut into infinite amounts of halves, each one is infinitely small distance shifted
@@annaagapova3583 sounds like... not four?
Lol semi means halve dumbass
I think what you say is right on! I really wish that I hired you for a private tour when I went to Israel last February. Keep making videos!
6:54 The Harvard team definitely should have gotten this point. "Outside" was used as an adverb in that sentence, not as a noun, plus the dropout team said "Moods clothing," a phrase which includes both a noun and an adjective. /lighthearted, I just love grammar lol
you're right
Oh good, I spent so long trying to figure out why "outside" was a noun and why "Moods" was included T-T
And I think they didnt say "we".
@@FilleChimere isn't that a pronoun?
@@bloody_nihilist8595 a pronoun is just a type of noun
I think rather than using a buzzer which partially makes the results based on who has a better reaction time, it would have been better if they wrote down their answers and showed them later and just had the points tallied up at the end to see who got the most points, so they can see how many each team got right overall.
Harvard is calling babe
Hand those college kids tools and see what happens 😂. College doesn’t make you intelligent, skills make you intelligent.
It was for the video
@@EasyBakinXskills that you develop in college.
This might shock you but smarter people generally have faster reaction times
We can see that Harvard students can be way better at math than most people
Btw, congrats to everyone! :)
Until some random Chinese Guy arrives
@@christopherKeznit bang on
tbh the math questions were easy and some of them (for example, the pythagoras theorem), can be gotten by cramming
And suck It at geography as everybody in USA
@@christopherKeznit bruh
Next time do an Asian kid vs Harvard students
When Kevin said New Zealand I just lost it. I'm from New Zealand and I never thought I would ever hear anyone say that New Zealand is large or high populated. We have a population of only 5 million! that's less than 1/13th the population of the UK and the UK is smaller than New Zealand! I am dying🤣🤣
that and the fact that new zealand isn't in east Asia haha
@@saanvisatpute8969 this. I was so shocked....
… or in East Asia
and the fact that he said "EAST ASIA" and the only solo island in East Asia is Japan
i think he thought he said had a high population of east asians lol
6:54 Joana was right
Outside isnt a noun, its an adverbial noun (noun that functions as an adverb, making outside an adverb)
Also Moods should be an adjective modifying clothing. Moods clothing is def not a compound noun because you would find it in the dictionary.
yeah i was really confused about this one
also the part when they debate if "are" is a verb???????
What the actual fuck?
> Outside isnt a noun, its a noun
Ok
@@victory9654 it's not a noun it's a preposition
@@yellowblobby are is a state of action, so are IS a verb. you ARE (state of being/action) consisting of common sense. 👍
@@orangecat9559 she said its an adverbial noun
The southern ocean is also called the antarctic ocean. So she was right.
it’s not recognized
Officially no. It's like saying US. It is USAAAA no matter what other people say
Many problems with this one:
1. "are" is a verb.
2. “outside” can be an adjective, adverb or noun depending on its usage in the sentence.
3. As another commenter already said: "hemisphere" literally comes from "hemi = half" and "sphaira = sphere" => so by definition of the word itself there can only be two, any other answer must be false.
Do your research, guys.
There's two main ways that we commonl dissect the Earth for geographic purposes. One is along the equator (northern/southern) and the other is along the prime meridian which is why our coordinate system includes east/west for longitude and north/south for latitude.
So many wrong answers by the host in this.
"Have" is a verb.
"Moods" in "Moods clothing" is an adjective not a noun.
"Hominids" are a taxonomic classification which include humans and the Great Apes, so the question asked (Whether hominids evolved into humans one million years ago.) makes no sense. Technically the answer is yes, since members of the Family Hominidae have existed for 17 million years.
it pissed me off how they ignored that "have" is a verb
also ‘we’ is a noun
you're right abt a hemisphere being the half of a sphere but the equator isn't the only line that divides the earth into two halves the prime meridian does the same so in that way we do get 4 but then again the question was a little ambiguous....
@@drishya4666 Good point. I will concede that I was wrong. There are, in fact, four hemispheres. Northern, Southern, Eastern, Western.
"Moods clothing" is a brand
1. The answer to the hemispheres question should have been 2. Yes, you could argue there *exists* 4 hemispheres, but you cannot *divide* the earth into 4 hemispheres. Once you choose a direction(north-south or east-west), that's it, you can't have both at the same time. There is no way you can get 4 half-spheres out of a single sphere(Banach-Tarski paradox notwithstanding)
2. The longitude question has several issues. First, unlike the equator the prime meridian does not go all the way around the earth, therefore it does not fully cut the earth in half. On the other side of the prime meridian you have 180 degrees longitude also known as the international date line. If we pretend that a half-cut is as good as a full-cut then we have an even bigger problem. The equator is special in that it is the only line of latitude that lies on a great-circle and thus divides the earth into equal haves. There is nothing special about the prime meridian it's just an arbitrary point we chose, every single line of longitude lies on a great circle so the answer in this case would be every line of longitude.
Yeah, hemi is literally Greek for half.
Japan is not an island, and not even by far the most populated in East Asia
If there are 4 hemispheres possible there are infinite of hemispheres possible, you can divide the Earth in two wherever you want lol, this question was so stupid
@@LithningWolf Or, there are none because Earth is not a sphere strictly speaking.
@@diogoferreira7427 its an island nation tho right? bc its an archipelago? anyway indonesia should be right assuming archapelago counts because its like double japans pop. so many questions had the wrong answers for this it makes me like actually pissed
I love Joanna's vibe
She nailed it in mathematics ✨💗
Elementary school math....
I may sound as a douche bag but that was like super basic math
We really are applauding bare minimum 😅
@@moona3206 frr even my 8yo sister can do that
@@fiony1 yes but can you actually say it that quick? It took me some seconds to solve them, she did It so fast.
Personally, I feel like you can’t really compare both of these students, because one decided to go to the next level of learning to learn everything that possibly could be learned, and the other one decided to take a step back from worldly learning, and went more to UA-cam learning, I guess you can call it so if the questions were a mixture between digital creator and worldly questions I think they both would come and close because you didn’t really give a fair advantage especially with the drop outs.
not drinking water makes veins quite hard to find! they like to run & hide
- a nurse who struggles to find veins in dehydrated patients 😭
omygosh hahahahhaha
i don’t drink enough water tbh and my veins are so bright and like stick out of my arms haha
@@jennasantostefano7785 true
The math seemed easy to do quickly, but I’m realizing that reading it instead of hearing makes a big difference.
Loved this...I so needed a laugh & this was lmao funny!!
this was soo funny!! I just wished y’all had more history/literature questions!! Great geography questions tho!!
Just to make common people understand:
( The dropouts can answer the general knowledge questions which anyone of us can quickly answer too but the Harvard students trash them when it comes to analysis and technical questions )
This is where education shows its edge because, as a dropout you have to be street smart to succeed in life.
Can we appreciate Kevin tho? He was the smartest and answered all the questions.
he literally thought new zealand was in east asia
@@moon-kj2wg it’s pretty basic geography but I’d excuse it if he’s been under a rock all his life
@@moon-kj2wg so mixing up 2 countries means ur dumb? U saying that proves that u just don't know what it means to actually be intelligent
@@Tom_HopeCore i didnt say he was dumb but his answer sort of was (do americans not have geography class im genuinely confused) and obviously it doesnt mean he's not intelligent, intelligence is way more that the questions in the video, this was just a lighthearted comment
@@moon-kj2wg in america i THINK but pretty sure we dont
I feel like there shouldve also been a section with questions about the things you dont learn about in school. Finances taxes etc..
Kennedy and Jesse. The comedic duo we didn’t know we needed.
648 likes and no comments? Lemme fix that buddy
Here it comes
Im fixing it
Not yet
Very close
AYOOOOO I met Kevin once during a student government thing and from our few interactions he seemed like one of the sweetest and most genuine people ever!!! And we stan west African kings😤
As a Pakistani student who hasn't even graduated high school, these questions were damn easy. So I guess Asian education will always be on top lol.
Asian education for da win
true
Europe High School, same.
Pakistani 6th grade, till 7th or 8th Grade, questions were easy lol
Im in 6th and got almost all of these
3:44 I DID NOT LEARN THAT IN 4TH GRADE BRO WHAT?😭😭
You learn algebra in 6th grade bro 😭😭
Exactly
me too
@@TanqrPlush I DIDNT😭(maybe it depends on what country we’re in🧐)
@@MD3.j_site probably yeah lol
As an 13 year old student from India who knew the answers even to the 12th grade questions I was surprised to find out that I am a genius and can join Harvard.
Same here I'm also from India... These questions are easy ...
so you are like a kid yelling for skin in valorant ?
@@AAA99953 how do you feel, getting yelled by a kid as smart as a Harvard student
@@joaquincaceresguibovich3182 jett rebib me jett gib me skin. Can't stop laughing ☠
Same dude
Hate that people are judging these peoples character based on their looks. These people seem really nice and like they had a great time playing this game against each other! Everyone has different reasons for their life taking the path it took, no reason to judge people for it.
I love how Kennedy is labelled the smartest person in one video and a college dropout in another 🤣
Can I get a link to the other one?
The questions are not fair. Most of the questions are academia, and people can be genius in other fields than academy.
One more for the road, Kennedy should get out of her comfort zone for the channel and go into the public areas, ask to draw other people in their natural state or natural surroundings. Probably interesting enough if she was willing.
Sadly it’s not that easy, social anxiety is hard to get over. That’s a great idea tho.
@@ssn3961 it actually is that easy
It might be hard for her to do but that doesn't mean it isn't that easy
@@aprayingatheist2378 it sound easy but it hard if u overthink alot 🥲
@@aprayingatheist2378 It’s not and an anxiety attack in that situation may worsen her social anxiety
@@udontevenwannaknowbruv I've found the opposite to be true. The anxiety in people only grew if they got their so called safe spaces and took themselves out of life. They got more and more sensitive and less self confident. Which absolutely makes sense, since we all grow on challenges and rather not on everything going our way. Talking in general here and not for a certain individual.
The dropouts had more sense of humor and artistic skills 😂 and harvard students had knowledge and brain power
But poor common sense
How much you wanna bet the Harvard students had hella extra curricular activities, probably in arts and community service and student government etc.
Getting into schools like Harvard are a lot more than getting As and good test scores. lol
@@clairoshade yeah that's what I thought
@@clairoshade sure but they aren’t all charismatic charming funny over achievers. Some are just highly intelligent normal people.
5:32 The word 'Are' is indeed a verb, for example, we use it in a sentence with the *Verb to be*
I don't know if I was stupid or something but I definitely was not doing equations with variables in them in fourth grade. 🤷♀️
Same!!!
i got it on my school, but the x was replaced by n
I've always loved seeing Kennedy and Jesse together
I kinda like them together! LOL
@@zoegarcia7031 I tell you... Lol.
I feel they fit.
@@PED922 lol, exactly! They would look amazing together! Oops sorry claud! LOL
Kennedy has a thing for guys in a relationship lmao jk
@@PED922 Don’t make it weird. Jesse and Claudia are happy together. Kennedy looks at Jesse like a brother.
The triangle one is a basic math trick it’s called a 3,4,5 triangle. 😂
We love Pythagorean triples
Triple phytagoras
I like this content a lot. Stereotypical looking popular kids vs nerd kids actually interacting and showing that it's all stereotypes is just so wholesome. I actually find that they are both smart just different priorities.
nah 2 influencers are dumb af
I wouldn't say influencers are "smart", that's a stretch...
@@TheStepmonkey If they can utilize what they have to make money, get famous and be successful in their own terms, that's indeed smart
@@quercus2298 The most important fields of work are STEM. You can be “smart” at entertainment, but the real deal is STEM.
Lies again? Harvard University Stop Kidding Yourself
This video has been recommended over to me more than 10x over the years. Finally decided to watch
It’s the misplaced confidence for me 😂😂 also I could never do math in my head like that, sheesh 👏🏽
Girl we watch the same people I see you everywhere😂
@Mikey Nikey why tf are you making this into race..
@Mikey Nikey someone's mad cause Kevin goes to harvard and they were homeschooled in a trailer park
@Mikey Nikey the guy that was in the Harvard team was black and two dropouts were white. wht's ur point?
Impressive? 🗿
Bruh, did the Harvard dude just say New Zealand was part of east Asia???? Oh my
Ikr!
Try street smart questions with these groups! It would be interesting!
Right most of them were chem and physics
@@usernotfound232 Exactly
@@usernotfound232 that's because these are high school questions...
I’d be so good at this since I was at the national science bee in 8th grade.
I love buzzer stuff
Honestly, as an Indian I wish that these questions were asked in JEE Advanced. I'd be like in IIT Bombay then 🌚🤧.
Literally kids can answer most of these questions.
2(x-8)= 22 😭😭 that would be preschool level maths in india
Forget science. Literally they don't know their native language. Wrong grammar literally pissed me off. 😂
Jee is a test of memory
Not intelligence
@@rubyciide5542 bro is drunk af rn
here in brazil we have a stereotype that most north americans don't know basic geography. i guess that's not just a stereotype...
im truly sorry lmao
Oia brazuca aki
It's true... most dont. They are an exception
Don't worry that stereotype is not only on Brazil, it's on the whole world lol
They don't; I think if the world understood how truly stupid modern Americans are (particularly the younger generations) they would be floored.
It's not only in brazil but basically everywhere except north amercia
People praising Joanna for solving elementary school math is shocking to me 😂
Elementary school math it's easy, it's hard to resolve it in seconds thought
@@ANTO-ln5rp the math was rlly simple, solving it in seconds is easy. i applaud her more for being able to do it without looking at it bc personally id forget it in a second
@@ANTO-ln5rp dividing 22 by 2 will take you 1 second and if u dont what added to 8 gives u 11 then u dont deserve to be in high school even, forget college. u will find it harder ofcourse if u try doing it the 2x+16=22 way
@@user-ws9ko1pu1y to do it mentally it's hard, ppl cannot sometimes to resolve it in seconds.. idk why ppl are making a big deal about it.
@@nikita-vp7ms girl💀 you missed my point "u dont deserve to be in high school" at least for me its easy elementary maths, but i cant resolve it mentally or in seconds. Thats it...
In the 6th grade question “outside” was used as an adverb modifying the verb “played”. So in this context, “outside” was not a noun and should not have been counted as such, even though the word “outside” can be used as a noun in other situations.
My favourite part was
Kennedy: That word’s not even in my vocabulary
Jesse: *to himself* Eu-Euphemism...
3:42 everybody is writing the equation while Joana is solving it mentally ;)
That question is simple but depends on the way you think of it.. we all know that 2x11=22 and the question says 2(x+8)=22 which means "x+8" must be equal to 11 therefore the answer is equal to 3 ordinary people see the question as 2(x+8)=22 but real mathematicians see it as 11-8=X
@@somerandomdude2245 basically
2(x+8) = 22
x+8 = 22/2
x+8 = 11
x = 11-8
x = 3
6:53 Joanna actually got it right 😭 "outside" is a preposition and "moods" is being used as an adjective
I disagree re. "Moods". It's not an adjective, it forms a compound noun with "clothing" -- it's just that the English orthography insists on spelling most compound nouns as separate words.
4:23 “Arctic 👁️👄👁️”
11:45
I think the reason it stops discomfort and pain because everyone is just going to be confused on the word
Bro, I'm a Brazilian student, and the questions is so easy, a kid can respond
Congrats bro your so smart! Be humble because you’ll look real silly when you actually get into college and high school and start to struggle 😂
@@Supercellgames-mi8jz I don't mean to be arrogant, but these are really easy high school issues here in Brazil.
@@be_lima9382 issues?
No shit the questions are easy, they literally started with elementary grade questions.
those “high school” questions literally are for 10 year olds in my country
We should try normal teachers vs Harvard students.
this was so fun to watch!
14:43 great example of why not all people are meant to be scientists.Artistic way of thought vs mathematical thinking
Funny enough my artistic way of thinking makes me better at science
@@desiree7633 there’s no such thing as “mathematical thinking”, it’s not a sense in itself. I think what you mean is logical (or critical) thinking. Actually being more of a creative thinker can be an amazing thing in science. It’s really inaccurate to think science is just about logic
@@yungmun4155 There is no such thing as mathematical thinking? really? just put it this way, math quantifies, and logic clarifies. Math is only useful for matters dealing with numbers and logic is useful for all matter and is basically a creative thought process. Logic is prone to errors due to intuitive false premise, while math is prone to errors of intuitive false conclusions. Also, mathematical thinking is a rigorous step by step process that can only go forward, meanwhile logic includes deduction (forward) and induction (backwards) process, therefore using logic you can solve problems such as criminal investigations or trouble shooting problems. In other words, they complement each other at some point, but they are very different types of thinking (you don't take into account pemdas when solving a murder case ;) ).
Also, how is it inaccurate to think that science is all about logic? I thought the scientific method was a rational, logical thought process that was used to figure out facts and truths based on evidence and ability to prove the results. Please elaborate :)
Artistic? That was a shitty drawing 😭
I think the question about the ante penultimate was the easiest for Spanish speakers, because you do not use the word ultimate, you use last, but we use “Última”. So we also use the other 2 (penúltima & antepenúltima) in our daily vocab.
Yeah, I would’ve popped off on that question 😭
I ain’t never heard them say words in my life
latin is the actual root ;) if you know latin, you know most
"outside" is NOT a noun, its a preposition in this case. "The outside of a box" there it would be a noun
THANK YOU
7:31 the most populated East Asian island country is Indonesia with 284,164,446 while Japan has 123,753,041 as of 2024 October 20th
Indonesia is in South East Asia.
Isn’t it China?
@@enderdragonkilr The question in the video was most populated island country in East Asia, so It couldn’t be China. But the most populated East Asian country in general is China though so you were still somewhat right.
@@Amaneamaneee_ Literally go on Google and search:
“Highest populated island country in East Asia.”
It will say Indonesia.
0:44 She sounded embarrassed that she only had a 4.0. gpa, and im over here, happy with a 2.5
I'm from India & the right angle triangle with sides 3, 4 and 5 is so sandard that we're considered stupid if we don't have it memorized... 😅
am from Asia, and can confirm this
@@jwanacena8704 Exactly, this was the first question you're asked when you learn Pythagoras Theorem.
It’s a standard in america too
14:04 I got this question right......here are the calculations
Let H=height of Bilbo
Ja=the actual height Bilbo jumped on planet A
Jb=actual height jumped by Bilbo
JHa=the height Bilbo reached with his head on planet A
Jhb=the height Bilbo reached with his head on planet B
A=acceleration on planet A
B=acceleration on planet B
So
Ja=JHa-H
=3-2
=1m
Thus
Ja/A=Jb/B
1m/10m/s.s=Jb/2m/s.s
Jb×10m/s.s=2m.m/s.s
Jb=5m
But we are asked what Jhb is so Jhb=H+Jb
=2m+5m
=7m
So the answer is 7 meters
.
.
.
.u'r welcome
Oml I had a aneurism reading this 😭😭
@@NotSythe.9yago lol I am actually dumb I don't know how I got this question right
It's much easier with one of the 4 1D motion equations.
Let the primary velocity be u, terminal velocity v , acceleration a and displacement S
Then we get the equation:-
v²= u²-2aS
Now for the first case,
a is 10m/s² and S is 1m as (Bilbo is 2 m tall and after the jump he reached the height of 3m from the planet surface, then the displacement by his bottom of feet is (3-2)m that is 1m), and v is zero(as the velocity is zero at the highest point he reached by jumping)
Therefore, 0 = u² - 2×10×1
Or, u²=20
Now in the second case, (with the exact jump means his primary velocity is same) u²= 20 , a is 2m/s² , and v is zero
Therefore we get,
0 = 20 - 2×2S
Or, S = 5 m
Now , the displacement by his head is (5+2)m = 7m
yeah that’s insanely easy it’s just hard to do it quickly
Wow thank you! I was so confused because I got 5 as the answer. Reminds me to read the questions more thoroughly!
Yes, "are" is a verb. Specifically, it's a form of the verb "to be" and is used as the present tense for the plural subjects (e.g., "They are," "We are") and for the second-person singular subject (e.g., "You are").
8:04
Kennedy: "ANTI-HERO"
Taylor Swift: "write that down"
At first i was like howd she do the math so fast, but i realized how after i thought about it and there are really easier/ different ways to get an answer fast especially if you have your times tables down!! Honestly opening my eyes so now i can solve faster too
JESSE and Kennedy are so funny 😂😂 the best duo !!!
0:25 bros jacked
Watching this made me realize I am far from smart
I hope you are but pls don't use American standards of smartness, they're abysmal 😭
@@kisakion:/