Words That Came from Native America

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  • Опубліковано 21 лип 2024
  • After publishing my definitive list of the twenty greatest American English words, some of you asked if any words had entered English via Native American languages. It turns out there are plenty.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 802

  • @LostinthePond
    @LostinthePond  5 років тому +269

    Just to clarify, this video intentionally didn't include Native-inspired *place names*, as those deserve their own series. Probably in 138 parts.

    • @dicesof8
      @dicesof8 5 років тому +11

      A 50 part series! 1 for every state.

    • @Angie-Pants
      @Angie-Pants 5 років тому +9

      Wisconsin alone would be 75 of those parts.

    • @kennashan
      @kennashan 5 років тому +5

      Virginia would take up a number of episodes, as well.

    • @kevinerose
      @kevinerose 5 років тому +5

      There are tonnes in Ohio too.

    • @R0KURU
      @R0KURU 5 років тому +3

      @@kevinerose Yes, definitely a lot here.

  • @Belboz99
    @Belboz99 5 років тому +118

    Here's one you might not realize is Native: "Tuxedo". The tuxedo is named after Tuxedo Park, NY where it originated and became popular as a style of men's clothing. But Tuxedo, NY was named after the Algonquian (Munsee) word Tuxedo.
    In Algonquian the word is "tucsedo" or "p'tuxseepu", ran refers to "crooked river"

    • @bland9876
      @bland9876 4 роки тому +3

      but British people are stereotyped as wearing the tuxedo hmm

    • @Barb5001
      @Barb5001 2 роки тому +2

      Brought up in Orange county NY. I was always very aware of that.
      Even that the town of "Tuxedo Park" is an upper class gated community

    • @Curmudgeon2
      @Curmudgeon2 Рік тому +3

      Actually the Dinner Jacket was popularized by the Prince of Wales and brought to the USA by someone from Tuxedo Park where then become popular and thus on this side of the Pond it is called a Tuxedo...

    • @Appophust
      @Appophust 5 місяців тому +1

      The tuxedo was invented in 1865 by
      Henry Poole & Company, a Savile Row Taylor in London, England. It was ordered by King Edward VII, who was the the Prince of Wales.

    • @Appophust
      @Appophust 5 місяців тому

      ​@@Curmudgeon2or a dinner suit.

  • @tedgovostis7351
    @tedgovostis7351 5 років тому +57

    As a Yank transplant to the UK, I was very confused when I came across someone insisting "Turtle" strictly refers to salt water animals, while "terrapin" is for freshwater ones. Turns out my confusion was due to the person being utterly incorrect, as "turtle" includes all the animals we think of with turtle, tortoise, and terrapin. Terrapin is another Algonquin word that somehow crossed the Atlantic and became the british english word for fresh water turtle, despite it not actually having any zoological validity.

    • @JEBavido
      @JEBavido 5 років тому +3

      I learned turtles are the kind that swim (fresh or salt water), tortoises are land animals and terrapin is another word for tortoise. It's probably wrong, but that's what I was taught.

    • @tedgovostis7351
      @tedgovostis7351 5 років тому +1

      @@JEBavidoAre you s Brit?

    • @JEBavido
      @JEBavido 5 років тому +1

      @@tedgovostis7351 ,no. I'm a Texan.

    • @tedgovostis7351
      @tedgovostis7351 5 років тому +4

      @@JEBavido Yeah for some reason, at least some Brits call freshwater turtles terrapins here. Some freshwater turtles do use terrapin as part of their common name, but there is no scientific basis for differentiating between the two.

  • @jonadabtheunsightly
    @jonadabtheunsightly 5 років тому +105

    You can't fool me. I know skunks can't be exclusive to the Americas, because Pepe Le Pew is obviously from France, you can tell by his accent. QED.
    Also, one that catches a lot of people by surprise is "woodchuck". Everyone assumes it's related to the English word "wood", since after all they do often live in the woods. But in fact that's a coincidence: the word is of native American origin.

    • @SuperDrLisa
      @SuperDrLisa 5 років тому +12

      Right? Pepe Le Pew is obviously French!

    • @Bentcypress
      @Bentcypress 5 років тому +12

      Yeah, but how much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?

    • @derekmills5394
      @derekmills5394 5 років тому +10

      @@SuperDrLisa Quebecois?

    • @bentleyr00d
      @bentleyr00d 5 років тому +2

      Seán Jared
      No way, Pepe spoke proper French.

    • @medfordguy65
      @medfordguy65 5 років тому +4

      Bentcypress7 A woodchuck could chuck a cord of wood if a woodchuck could chuck wood.

  • @benvanderwoude4484
    @benvanderwoude4484 5 років тому +90

    Colonists not only took the native words for some indigenous plants, they also adopted some agricultural practices. The growing in the same row and eating together of the 'three sisters' (corn, beans and squash) is common to this day. The planting together greatly increases the yield and quality of all three and consuming them together is synergistically more nutritious than eating them independently. This was a practice learned from the Iroquois and spread throughout the colonies and later the country.

    • @amandag417
      @amandag417 5 років тому +11

      And although colonists learned some agricultural techniques from Native Americans, Americans unfortunately didn't learn enough and that is why we had situations like the Dust Bowl....

    • @benvanderwoude4484
      @benvanderwoude4484 5 років тому +12

      amandag417 The addition of mechanical assistance, lack of knowledge about the perc rate of soil and the underlying aquifer and unprecedented demand for American grain worldwide combined to cause the dust bowl. I guess if they had stuck to sustenance farming, foraging and hunting like the native Americans it wouldn't have happened but that wouldn't have satisfied demand.
      Anyway, this is what I get for creating a tangent....another tangent.

    • @FrankD71864
      @FrankD71864 5 років тому +11

      Three Sisters. Beans provide nitrogen in the soil for the corn. Squash is a natural pesticide. Corn stalk provides the pole for the bean.

    • @jmicone6895
      @jmicone6895 5 років тому +4

      Yes, and you plant them in the same hill or mound of soil, not in rows. Rows are for accommodating machines.

    • @benvanderwoude4484
      @benvanderwoude4484 5 років тому +1

      @J Micone
      The Iroquois probably did but we plant em in rows.. We use tractors until the corn gets a little higher than a couple inches.

  • @spacecatboy2962
    @spacecatboy2962 5 років тому +31

    i learned from alice cooper that Milwaukee is an Algonquian word that means the "good land"

    • @drivers99
      @drivers99 5 років тому

      Dances with Kitty Cats : that's exactly what I thought of when he said Algonquin :)

    • @spacecatboy2962
      @spacecatboy2962 5 років тому +1

      haha, thats funny. Its a small world aint it? Milwaukee has certainly had its share of visitors. @@drivers99

    • @corinnekinzinger5494
      @corinnekinzinger5494 5 років тому

      Topeka is good place to grow potatoes.

    • @Vodhin
      @Vodhin 4 роки тому +1

      "We're not worthy" of that knowledge!

    • @AuburnTigers111
      @AuburnTigers111 4 роки тому +1

      I was not aware of that.

  • @rasapplepipe
    @rasapplepipe 5 років тому +128

    Wampum, wapati and succotash are also Native American. Tomato, chocolate, coyote and avocado all come from Native Mexican Náhuatl.

    • @LostinthePond
      @LostinthePond  5 років тому +16

      Indeed! Good words for part 2!

    • @TheAtkey
      @TheAtkey 5 років тому +18

      Hurricane is a Mayan word. Toboggan is another Algonquin word.

    • @rasapplepipe
      @rasapplepipe 5 років тому +7

      @@TheAtkey cacao is also Mayan. Tobacco comes from Taino.

    • @kevinerose
      @kevinerose 5 років тому +10

      Don't forget the amazing Potato

    • @maxpowr90
      @maxpowr90 5 років тому +11

      Kayak is another great one.

  • @victorwaddell6530
    @victorwaddell6530 5 років тому +75

    I'm 1/8 Cherokee from the Carolinas . Thanks for speaking about the Native Americans and our languages . Here's a few words in English with native origins . Tomahawk , canoe , kayak , succotash , potato , tobacco , chocolate , avocado . Hominy is ground into finer bits making the southern dish called grits . Pumpkins are a type of squash , the hard skinned squashes are called winter squash , the soft skin types are called summer squash . Succotash today is a stew of vegetables , but long ago contained vegetables and wild game meats . The dish Brunswick Stew is derived from early succotash .

    • @SuperDrLisa
      @SuperDrLisa 5 років тому +3

      Thanks for that info, very interesting!

    • @Markle2k
      @Markle2k 5 років тому +6

      Brits may be slightly more familiar with the mediterranean adaptation of grits called polenta.

    • @victorwaddell6530
      @victorwaddell6530 5 років тому +7

      @@Markle2k Same food with different names . Grits are a common staple in the South and cheap . Polenta is an exotic Italian dish with a high price tag . Go figure . I cooked up a pot of grits with cheese and eggs this morning , shared them with my grandpa . I should have boiled a pot , called them polenta , and made $30 in some fancy restaraunt .

    • @judyvalencia3257
      @judyvalencia3257 5 років тому +6

      Love, Love, Love grits! With butter! Yum.

    • @w8stral
      @w8stral 5 років тому +7

      Don't forget the word Potluck which is used everywhere in the USA and Canada. Pow wow, Totem, Muskeg, skookum(awesome/powerful) but this word is pretty much only used in WA/BC

  • @amandag417
    @amandag417 5 років тому +137

    No skunk in England? Maybe we should send some of our skunks to the Brits as a gift...

    • @spacecatboy2962
      @spacecatboy2962 5 років тому +37

      operation skunk drop, flying over, dropping skunks onto britain with little parachutes on them.

    • @christelheadington1136
      @christelheadington1136 5 років тому +10

      Talk about invasive species!

    • @FrankD71864
      @FrankD71864 5 років тому +16

      @@spacecatboy2962 Maybe Les Nessman can cover the drop for WKRP.

    • @marysmith6671
      @marysmith6671 5 років тому +5

      @MrSting17 burgoo is squirrel stew, would you like some recipes

    • @dimesonhiseyes9134
      @dimesonhiseyes9134 5 років тому +4

      @MrSting17 I would love to come and help rid the British isle of the squirrels. I love squirrel meat. I might be the next st Patrick or his British equivalent I mean.

  • @garynelson561
    @garynelson561 5 років тому +61

    Raccoons are derided, because they're too goddamn smart. They, like squirrels, are masters of taking advantage of any food stuffs we humans leave unguarded for any reason. Wanna leave that fruit to ripen? Too bad! The raccoons are on it.
    Pretty much anything left where they can get it, is theirs. They've been around us so long, and have watched and learned all our tricks. Toronto recently put out a raccoon proof garbage bin only to have raccoons figure out how to break it in less than a month.
    I personally think raccoons are great, but we shouldn't coddle them or they'll lose their edge.

    • @JJoy-bk8yr
      @JJoy-bk8yr 5 років тому +17

      I kept cat food in in five gallon bucket with a screw top until I caught two raccoons standing up on either side of the bucket, turning the lid together with obviously coordinated movements.

    • @nancyomalley6441
      @nancyomalley6441 5 років тому +3

      @@JJoy-bk8yr Wow! That's actually adorable! I'll bet they can take an I.Q. test better than some humans!

    • @spelunk8
      @spelunk8 5 років тому +4

      Us Torontonians have a mixed feelings relationship with trash pandas. We love them, and are annoyed by them at the same time

    • @raymonddavis1370
      @raymonddavis1370 5 років тому +1

      Because they play us so well there are now more skunks and racoons living in urban areas than there was when the same areas were wild.

    • @monember2722
      @monember2722 4 роки тому +2

      They are derided because they can be vicious animals. Careful with your elderly and children. They are also rabies prone.

  • @carolgage4569
    @carolgage4569 5 років тому +8

    Old joke for Laurence: A couple was driving through a state that had many difficult to pronounce Native names for their towns. At one gas and restroom stop, they also visited a local drive thru before returning to the highway. As the teenaged blonde girl was handing them their order, the husband asked, “Miss, can you please, very slowly, pronounce for me the name of where we are right now?” The girl leaned forward and and clearly enunciated “Burr-Gerr-King!” 😀

    • @crosscastle100
      @crosscastle100 3 роки тому

      Same with Texas town of Mexia. But it is Diary Queen

  • @bob_._.
    @bob_._. 5 років тому +18

    A couple political terms from Native American - caucus (Algonquin) and mugwump (Massachusett). And woodchuck (Narragansett) is another animal, maybe more widely known as the ground hog and less widely known as the whistle pig.

    • @JEBavido
      @JEBavido 5 років тому +2

      Marvelous! In the Harry Potter books one of the positions attributed to the Dumbledore character is "supreme mugwump". :D

    • @bob_._.
      @bob_._. 5 років тому +3

      LOL Makes me wonder if J.K. knows the actual meaning of the word.

    • @bentleyr00d
      @bentleyr00d 5 років тому

      Chocolate is from the Aztecs, right?

    • @bob_._.
      @bob_._. 5 років тому +1

      Nahuatl, which was spoken by the Aztecs, among others.

    • @PokieKnows
      @PokieKnows 5 років тому

      A mugwump is a bird that sits on a fence with his mug on one side and his wump on the other! (My mom taught me that as a child and it still makes me giggle!)

  • @justinadams2010
    @justinadams2010 5 років тому +6

    My grandmother, who lived her whole life in Kentucky, usually referred to a skunk as a pole cat.

    • @archenema6792
      @archenema6792 5 років тому

      I thought polecats wuz weezels.

    • @mamieanding5691
      @mamieanding5691 4 роки тому

      We named a B&W cat Polecat.

    • @johanrunfeldt7174
      @johanrunfeldt7174 3 роки тому

      @@archenema6792 They are, but skunks are also members of the weasel family.

  • @thefury110
    @thefury110 5 років тому +24

    I really like the language videos man. Always a lot of interesting bits in here

    • @LostinthePond
      @LostinthePond  5 років тому +3

      Glad to hear it!

    • @SuperDrLisa
      @SuperDrLisa 5 років тому +3

      Me too Lawrence!

    • @jbach1738
      @jbach1738 Рік тому

      Yes. I really like all the Lost in the Pond videos, but the language ones are far and away my favorite. Wado!

  • @howtubeable
    @howtubeable 5 років тому +41

    SERIOUSLY! Lawrence, watch The Beverly Hillbillies. It's a treasure-trove of quaint American English!

    • @LostinthePond
      @LostinthePond  5 років тому +6

      Will do. Thanks!

    • @SuperDrLisa
      @SuperDrLisa 5 років тому +4

      Oh loved that TV show. In black and white. Again showing my age! 😉

    • @susanbrown5080
      @susanbrown5080 5 років тому +6

      Wow, that brought back lovely memories. I also loved watching that show in black and white here in the U.K. and definitely long before I had Laurence.

    • @bobbyhood101
      @bobbyhood101 5 років тому +9

      Actually hillbilly English is what 17th and 18th century English without much change it was contained within the appalachian mountains almost unchanged for a couple centuries it's was considered a language isolate!

    • @Author.Noelle.Alexandria
      @Author.Noelle.Alexandria 3 роки тому

      That show is great! I love how the butt-end of the jokes almost always ended up being the supposedly better-educated, supposedly sophisticated city-folk. That show so easily could have gone into cringe territory, but managed to avoid doing so.

  • @jameswoodard4304
    @jameswoodard4304 5 років тому +13

    Hominy and the process of making it (nixtamization) is vitally important though little known. Many Native American societies depended on maize corn as their main staple crop. When whites took over, this also became the case among Americans, espescially in the South. Unbeknownst to Anglo-Americans at the time, however, maize corn does not provide the biologically necessary nutrient Niacin (vitamin B) unlike the other grains that Europeans were used to depending on. During the Great Depression, when the Southern diet depended to a huge extent on maize corn for everything from beverages to bread, the mysterious disease Palagra swept the region killing and disabling large numbers of children. It turns out the Native tribes had long ago learned of the necessity of treating a small amount of their corn with special solutions to provide a balanced diet and stave of illness. When corn is turned into hominy, it is able to release Niacin into the system. Once people were finally convinced that Palagra was simply a vitamin defficiency, many lives were saved, and hominy became a staple of Southern cooking.

    • @bentleyr00d
      @bentleyr00d 5 років тому +4

      James Woodard
      The Massachusetts Pilgrims came to live on a diet of beans and cornbread, both of which they learned from the Wampanoag, and I guess the combination was probably much healthier than just corn alone.

  • @colinedmunds2238
    @colinedmunds2238 5 років тому +27

    The Raccoon is also known as “Trash Panda”, originating as a joke online. They’re, to use a British word, cheeky. Mischievous and clever, you have to respect their hustle.

  • @KamisamanoOtaku
    @KamisamanoOtaku 5 років тому +12

    @7:40 Trash panda!
    (I know, I shouldn't be greedy and just be happy with the SMB3 shoutout!)

  • @annam.addison2129
    @annam.addison2129 5 років тому +24

    Got a movie for you... you will hear 80% of the native words you just discussed in this video. "The Last of the Mochicans" with Danial Day Lewis... Brilliant Film.... amazing soundtrack. Be Good.

    • @LostinthePond
      @LostinthePond  5 років тому +12

      Bloody love that film! AND soundtrack!

    • @dimesonhiseyes9134
      @dimesonhiseyes9134 5 років тому +3

      It's an even better book.

    • @richd5476
      @richd5476 5 років тому

      If you visit NY Glens falls/Lake George is def worth the visit for the F&I war history and Rev war as well.You can see the real Coopers cave that inspired the book.

    • @ronaldcammarata3422
      @ronaldcammarata3422 5 років тому

      @@dimesonhiseyes9134 I never thought Cooper was a very good writer. I liked the story, but his prose was very stodgy.

    • @dimesonhiseyes9134
      @dimesonhiseyes9134 5 років тому

      @@ronaldcammarata3422 I'm not familiar with any of his other work. I do remember it being long and drawn out at times it seems. But I did like the story

  • @gssbcvegancat2345
    @gssbcvegancat2345 5 років тому +18

    Jaguar was a word that came from native south Americans that uk people are familiar with and based on my understanding of the language (I'm mvskoke so it isn't my native language) Americans pronounce it closer to it's original sound than Europeans. Also maze, hurricane etc. There are many words taken from our languages. It's sad because for a long time it was illegal for us to speak our own language, so much of it has been lost. Also please don't use the word squaw, that is not a good word and I was afraid you would say that.

    • @carlablair9898
      @carlablair9898 Рік тому

      I have a friend who is a Catawba Indian. The Catawba language has been lost, which I think is sad.

    • @WGGplant
      @WGGplant Рік тому +1

      @@carlablair9898 languages come and go, its unfortunate, but that's how it goes. "English wont be around forever either." though with the invention of the internet, that saying means less than it used to, as language is spread across the entire planet now
      all we can do is study and appreciate them. though there are many cases of ppl actively deciding to bring a language back from extinction, which i think is cool.

    • @jbach1738
      @jbach1738 Рік тому +1

      @@WGGplant yes! I love these programs that are trying to bring back endangered languages before they become extinct. I am personally studying Cherokee, as my grandmother was Cherokee and I want to learn more about the language and culture of my ancestors. There are a lot of resources now to study these languages completely free. Even Duolingo now has a course for Navajo.

  • @thedorsinator
    @thedorsinator 3 роки тому +1

    I just want you to know that I’m recovering from an illness that has been long term. I’m doing about 75% better after 9 months of suffering, but one of the things that has been so helpful to getting my mind off of it has been this channel. Your humor, love, and whit are enchanting, and guest visits from your wife make the channel even more fun. The videos have been great fun when I otherwise can’t do much to have fun and have even accompanied me as I drift off to sleep. I don’t know why I’m commenting this on a 2 year old video but, here I am. God bless you.
    Lol and side note, I’m pretty sure the mayflower had no booze as the passengers were puritans and believed in abstinence from alcohol and basically anything fun.

  • @curtbarnes4294
    @curtbarnes4294 5 років тому +2

    Laurence, you and Alexis de Toqueville are my 2 fave non-native observers of this country. The advantage here is that we can ask you questions! thanks as usual--this is particularly fascinating.

  • @jeromemckenna7102
    @jeromemckenna7102 5 років тому +13

    I lived in an area of Clifton, NJ, called 'Skunk Hollow' and we certainly had a lot of those mostly friendly creatures. Raccoons are very talented at getting stuff out of garbage cans. They love the suburbs and they used to knock over our garbage cans if we had chicken bones in the garbage.

    • @Belboz99
      @Belboz99 5 років тому +2

      Racoons are the most bothersome while camping. They're very good at getting into coolers, picnic baskets, etc. Even latched coolers. One night I was falling asleep and heard a noise, went out with my flashlight just in time to see a giant trash panda dragging a 1L tupperware container of GORP into the woods. I really wanted that GORP. :(

    • @SunflowerSpotlight
      @SunflowerSpotlight 5 років тому +2

      Yeah, we have a Skunk Hollow street in TN! And Pig Lane. Of course most people call the former Skunk Haller. 😅
      If I had an animal band, raccoons would play bass I think.

    • @pyrovania
      @pyrovania 5 років тому +3

      @@Belboz99 sure that wasn't a black bear?
      Bears in the Sierras are very skilled at getting at people food, even if you sling it up in a tree, they send the cubs out on the branch.

    • @gloriastroedecke2717
      @gloriastroedecke2717 5 років тому

      Jerome Mc Kenna What part of Clifton is that? I lived off of Lexington next to Mahar back in the 1980's.

    • @craigistheman101
      @craigistheman101 5 років тому

      Small world, I’m currently in Clifton now

  • @derekmills5394
    @derekmills5394 5 років тому +8

    How about that word we all seem to use when jumpin off something - like a diving board, aeroplane or whatever - GERONIMO!

    • @washingtonradio
      @washingtonradio 5 років тому +2

      Actually not a word but a name of an Apache chief.

    • @corinnekinzinger5494
      @corinnekinzinger5494 5 років тому +2

      and it derived from Spanish, it's the name Jerome.

    • @urmorph
      @urmorph 3 роки тому

      @@corinnekinzinger5494 In turn derived from Greek and Latin Hieronymus, "named for the holy." Geronimo was used by American paratroopers, apparently to provide a brief pause before pulling the ripcord.

  • @richd5476
    @richd5476 5 років тому +1

    Here in Vermont we have Tamarack trees.Onr of my favorite north woods trees.Also toboggan,tomahawk.

  • @spiffyspits3605
    @spiffyspits3605 3 роки тому +2

    Thank you for mentioning 'hominy'!!! I love hominy with butter, a great comfort food.

  • @philipcone357
    @philipcone357 4 роки тому

    Very nice series!

  • @morgainnetaar
    @morgainnetaar 5 років тому +24

    Native American words, here in Alabama are common. From, Noccalula Falls, Tuscaloosa, Talladega, Wetumpka (and many more) which are all locations of course. My children have found authentic arrow heads made from stone just walking along some of the shorelines of creeks and rivers or hiking in Oak Mountain or Talladega National Forest.

    • @LostinthePond
      @LostinthePond  5 років тому +7

      Native American place names could take up their own 30-part video series. So many of them! Even "Chicago" has its roots in Algonquian!

    • @burymycampaignatwoundedkne3395
      @burymycampaignatwoundedkne3395 5 років тому +2

      The South in general is like that. Tennessee is full of them too.

    • @rayperrault1538
      @rayperrault1538 5 років тому +1

      I live in Oklahoma. Even the state is a Choctaw word. But alot of the towns names are Native as well

    • @lesnyk255
      @lesnyk255 5 років тому +1

      Nancy Kelly - same up here in New Hampshire. Ashuelot, Monadnock, Sunapee, Winnepesauke, Wantastiquet, Wapack, Nubanusit... down in Massachusetts you've got Cohasset, Rehoboth, Nantucket...

    • @amandafelt4059
      @amandafelt4059 5 років тому +1

      Same in New York. There are a lot of Native American named waterways and places, but I believe the same can be said for most of the continental U.S.

  • @russellcannon9194
    @russellcannon9194 5 років тому +15

    Possums are quite common where I live in the deep south, and I have had occassion to handle them. They do play dead, but they will also bite and pee on you. When you see a possum "run", you will realize why they play dead. Their "run" is more like a scoot, and it is funny to watch. There is probably no possum predator that they can outrun. Cheers, Russ

    • @FrankD71864
      @FrankD71864 5 років тому

      Have that walks around the backyard every night.

    • @alexanderthegreatest1781
      @alexanderthegreatest1781 5 років тому +8

      As long as they like gobbling up ticks, they're cool in my book. Screw, those little bloodsucking vectors.

    • @peacefulpossum2438
      @peacefulpossum2438 5 років тому +4

      Possums have gotten a bad rap. Not only do they eat pests including ticks, they don't carry rabies. They'd much rather be left alone than get into it with anyone. In fact, they rarely bite.

    • @PokieKnows
      @PokieKnows 5 років тому +1

      They'd do much better if they began to use crosswalks, tho.

    • @teenystudioflicks1635
      @teenystudioflicks1635 4 роки тому

      I live in Washington state (West coast) and Possums cut through the yard often. Occasionally if the dogs are out they just race across the top of the wooden back fence. It is about 6 feet high so they feel safe and just hiss at the dogs. My granny ate them and squirrels often as a child. About as revolting as those Texas guys who ate BBQ rats, gag! (of course in a pinch maybe... big pinch that is)

  • @larryphilby4918
    @larryphilby4918 5 років тому +14

    The opossum is also a marsupial.
    You mean like kangaroos, koalas, and Tasmanian devils?
    Yep.
    There's also a possum in Australia. Similar, but not related. Just another marsupial to them.
    South America had a number of marsupials, bit after being connected to North America, the placental invaders made most of them go extinct. The opossums came north and were successful, since they can and will eat anything.

    • @jillshort9241
      @jillshort9241 4 роки тому

      Except a captive possum I knew, called Frodo, who would only eat his broccoli if it was mixed in with fruity yogurt 😀 True story

    • @urmorph
      @urmorph 3 роки тому +3

      In Australia the marsupial in question is always called possum, never opossum, which is preferred by American zoologists. Why the Ozzies chose that word is puzzling, but no more so than American use of buzzard, elk, robin, turkey, etc. ad nauseam.

    • @negf22
      @negf22 3 роки тому

      Opossums like and eat lots of insects, especially TICKS. They will however eat just about anything.

  • @marianawelbers5020
    @marianawelbers5020 2 роки тому

    Very interesting research. Thank you!

  • @miporsche
    @miporsche 5 років тому +3

    Pretty fun. I enjoy your vids.

  • @jeaniechowdury576
    @jeaniechowdury576 4 роки тому

    This episode qqa especially interesting. Thank you!!!

  • @lokimartin9686
    @lokimartin9686 5 років тому +10

    youve been to wv i find it hard to believe youve not encountered a possum lol

  • @McSnacks930
    @McSnacks930 5 років тому +2

    Love these, geoguesser videos are great! This channel rocks

  • @boperadotto8703
    @boperadotto8703 5 років тому +8

    In the PNW we have potlatch and kayak, for example

    • @shellh929
      @shellh929 5 років тому

      What's potlatch?

    • @boperadotto8703
      @boperadotto8703 5 років тому +2

      Shell H (pronounced pot-luck) It was/is a gift-giving feast, which you can read up on more accurately than I can portray. In the colloquial use, it refers to a feast where all invited parties bring part of the meal

    • @shellh929
      @shellh929 5 років тому

      Lost in the Pond probably hasn't heard that one because he's mostly lived in the Midwest where we call that a potluck. It's probably another iteration of potlatch. Thanks for the reply/info. :)

    • @boperadotto8703
      @boperadotto8703 5 років тому

      chi wa We pronounce it potluck, but spelling probably changed on it’s way over to you

    • @shellh929
      @shellh929 5 років тому

      Language is so interesting!

  • @gloriastroedecke2717
    @gloriastroedecke2717 5 років тому +4

    Very enjoyable. Thanks, Laurence. When I was younger, more often the animal possum was pronounced Opossum. I never hear that pronounciation any more. I would love to see a follow up with John Smith's list. Glad we say Raccoon, because I like the song Rocky Raccoon and it just wouldn't be the same.

    • @LostinthePond
      @LostinthePond  5 років тому +4

      Rocky Raccoon - very underrated Beatles song!

    • @rebelpearl
      @rebelpearl 5 років тому +5

      Gloria Stroedecke Opossum is the correct official name. Possum is what we usually call them. I grew up not liking possums very much since I lived on a farm and our chickens were often targeted for meals by them. However I live in town now and welcome our neighborhood possum since it keeps the unwanted rodent population down.

    • @christelheadington1136
      @christelheadington1136 5 років тому +1

      @@LostinthePond -The song that gets stuck in my head, every time I hear it.

    • @lindataylor6168
      @lindataylor6168 5 років тому +1

      Listen closely to Rocky Raccoon. It’s Paul doing his best American accent, really funny!

  • @Ojisan642
    @Ojisan642 5 років тому +2

    “Canoe” is the native loanword American school teachers use as an example of such, at least when I was a kid. So probably the most well known of the native loanwords.

  • @jwb52z9
    @jwb52z9 5 років тому +11

    I never would have thought of eating raw squash and I had no idea that it didn't exist in Europe or the UK. I know I've heard British people use the word "gourd" before, so I just assumed squash was a thing in the UK.

    • @LostinthePond
      @LostinthePond  5 років тому +6

      We probably do have it in the UK, but the word squash usually refers to a drink.

    • @themoviedealers
      @themoviedealers 5 років тому +1

      @@LostinthePond Which in the United States would be probably called "concentrated fruit juice" or "fruit juice concentrate."

    • @michaelpytel3280
      @michaelpytel3280 5 років тому +2

      @@LostinthePond Maybe you should do a taste test: Lemon Squash versus Orange Squash versus whiskey.

    • @SuperDrLisa
      @SuperDrLisa 5 років тому +3

      We eat a salad with raw zucchini and yellow summer squash I just put it in the pasta salad with the other veggies tomatoes, carrots, spinach, whatever is on sale or good at the farmers market!

    • @SuperDrLisa
      @SuperDrLisa 5 років тому +1

      @@LostinthePond Lawrence, what's in that drink,?

  • @beverlyjohnson8801
    @beverlyjohnson8801 Рік тому

    Love this guys accent and I love the show. Very Sharp.

  • @fday1964
    @fday1964 4 роки тому

    Based on this entry, I subscribed to your channel. There could be numerous additions based on region. I'm from the Standing Rock Sioux tribe based in North Dakota, though I live in Denver CO.
    I've also traveled to the UK several times, and have friends up Newcastle.
    Several films use various Native American languages, from Black Robe, to Wind Walker, Dreamkeeper to Dances With Wolves.
    Cheers!

  • @carrierueden3410
    @carrierueden3410 5 років тому

    Great transitions👍🏼👍🏼

  • @KeithCooper-Albuquerque
    @KeithCooper-Albuquerque 5 років тому

    Thanks, this was entertaining!

  • @historygeekslive8243
    @historygeekslive8243 5 років тому

    Great video on Native words. You mentioned Jamestown. I am going to see Jamestown for the first time in February. After 10 years of research I was finally able to take my family tree back to some of the first settlers in Virginia. I discovered that my immigrant ancestor came over from England in 1649 as an indentured servant and settled in a place called Accomack, Virginia which is about two hours from Jamestown!

  • @michaelhaywood8262
    @michaelhaywood8262 2 роки тому

    In GB English 'squash' is also non-alcoholic drink made from fruit juice and sugar [or sweetener in reduced calorie versions]. it is usually diluted before consumption. The drink is aka fruit crush or cordial.

  • @marygebbie6611
    @marygebbie6611 5 років тому +7

    Isn't moose another animal name from Native American languages? Same with wapiti, although in the US we don't really use that name.
    Some others that I can think of as more obvious words like moccasin, succotash, canoe, hammock, persimmon, and of course, pecan.

    • @archenema6792
      @archenema6792 5 років тому

      Sylvester the Cat was the original advocate for Algonquin bilingualism.

  • @shawnn1412
    @shawnn1412 5 років тому +6

    Pronunciation of Grrman improves after a few whiskies

  • @marygebbie6611
    @marygebbie6611 5 років тому

    since you mentioned hickory, it made me think of the old poem Hickory Dickory Dock, so I looked it up. Wikipedia says it originated in rhyme book published in London in the 1740s. So that could imply the word became popular enough to be in a poem across the pond relatively quickly.

  • @texasborn2720
    @texasborn2720 5 років тому +2

    Not to mention Nations (Like Canada) States, Cities , Towns, Rivers, Streams, Lakes, State Parks, National Parks. Have Native-American names !

  • @ALRIHAE
    @ALRIHAE 5 років тому +15

    You don't like pumpkin pie? Back across the pond with you!

    • @lesnyk255
      @lesnyk255 5 років тому +3

      lol, I was thinking the same - it's one of my favorites!

    • @cynthiax56
      @cynthiax56 5 років тому

      I'm a yank and I don't like pumkin pie and I hate apple pie too.

    • @GailGurman
      @GailGurman 3 роки тому

      Actually he misspoke here. In the pumpkin pie vs sweet potato pie, I think he preferred the pumpkin pie. Since pumpkin is a type of squash, when he said he tried it in a pie as an alternative to pumpkin pie, he was mixing up "squash" with "sweet potato."

  • @DebraKilgore
    @DebraKilgore 5 років тому

    We've had a possum come inside the house for the dry cat food a couple of different times (I live in the country). I used a broom to push them back outside.

  • @gypsybelle4757
    @gypsybelle4757 Рік тому

    I always feel smarter after a LITP video. Love these!

  • @ADGreen-es6hm
    @ADGreen-es6hm 5 років тому

    My mother's fathers side of the family branch, has an ancestor, that was on Cp Smith , to Roanoke Island.

  • @HemlockRidge
    @HemlockRidge 5 років тому +5

    Hominy is shortened from "Hominy-Grits-with butter-and-salt-and- pepper-and-maybe-cheese".

  • @wendelynmusic
    @wendelynmusic 4 роки тому +1

    I've noticed that much of your word info is affected by where you live. Here in the Pacific Northwest there are quite a few words influenced by the tribes here. I also noticed similar things when I lived in Arizona. That said I'm really glad to see you did this. Thanks!

    • @jn1mrgn
      @jn1mrgn 4 роки тому

      I know, Laurence's "American" stuff is always so Midwestern.

  • @Petunia-Greene
    @Petunia-Greene 5 років тому +1

    On the subject of skunks: you usually only ever encounter them on a summer night when they’ve had the misfortune of becoming road pizza (there’s some slang for ya) and you can smell them for miles.

    • @jn1mrgn
      @jn1mrgn 4 роки тому

      I've seen them many times when walking in the evening. I've had them run up to me too.

  • @The214thRabidFangirl
    @The214thRabidFangirl 4 роки тому

    Everytime you mentioned the Algonquin languages, it struck me because I knew I had heard that word before. Eventually I remembered that a book I had listened to named a powerful water spirit Algonquin. It was a good book, but we never actually meet her.

  • @JPMadden
    @JPMadden 3 роки тому +2

    In Rhode Island we have the Narragansett word "quahog" used to refer to a type of hard-shell clam. I don't know how widely the word is used, but fans of "Family Guy" will recognize it as the name of the fictional hometown of the Griffins.

  • @uwbadger79
    @uwbadger79 5 років тому

    There are possums in Chicago. I have, on a couple occasions, seen one going up/down the backstairs of buildings looking through (I assume) garbage cans. One time I opened the back door and one was crouched right by the door....quite a surprise.

  • @stephenwoodman6015
    @stephenwoodman6015 5 років тому

    I watch Coronation Street episodes from the 60s and 70s. I remember the episode with Elsie Tanner's wedding reception and pumpkin pie was served. People were not familiar with it.

  • @jjalt95
    @jjalt95 3 роки тому

    At approximately 6:12 into your presentation I thought I saw, up on the North American side of the picture, Godzilla! I know that can't be so since that was a Japanese product. :p

  • @Mreffs101
    @Mreffs101 5 років тому +11

    Maybe a list of states or cities with Native American names?

    • @LostinthePond
      @LostinthePond  5 років тому +7

      Plenty of material to work with there!

    • @amandag417
      @amandag417 5 років тому +2

      @@LostinthePond For sure! And what about cities named after another city in another country? Why is that so? I'm especially interested in lesser-known towns. Like why is Cairo Illinois named such? Although it's a ghost town now, Cairo was the promised land in Mark Twain's book.

    • @Isabella66Gracen
      @Isabella66Gracen 5 років тому +2

      There are so many of those, he'd have to go state by state, and it would be in (as he commented above) in 138 parts. At least. In the state of Utah alone there are hundreds (including the state name itself-- which is Ute for Mountain).

    • @diarradunlap9337
      @diarradunlap9337 5 років тому +1

      Far too many for one video. Massachusetts alone would give you a goodly number. Connecticut, also.

    • @Mreffs101
      @Mreffs101 5 років тому +1

      @@diarradunlap9337 A series then perhaps? He's done them before. 😁

  • @angelasaunders3558
    @angelasaunders3558 5 років тому +2

    Many of our states have Native origins such as my home state of Michigan... good idea for next Native American words - how many states are named after Native American words. 😊

  • @OakeDoki
    @OakeDoki 5 років тому

    I'm from a town called Palatka in Florida. It means crossing over or cow crossing. Its a Seminole term

  • @quintenm4316
    @quintenm4316 5 років тому +15

    When is the Utah video coming out?

    • @LostinthePond
      @LostinthePond  5 років тому +12

      I'm shooting for by the end of January!

    • @ShadowACE1998
      @ShadowACE1998 5 років тому +5

      Be patient bro. He lives in Chi-Town. He has to realize there is a whole state called Illinois that isn't Chicago first. LOL

    • @TheNascarfan999
      @TheNascarfan999 5 років тому

      @@ShadowACE1998 Oh he knows that already because he is one of the 1% of Chicagoins to have ever actually been south of Joliet to discover the rest of Illinois when he drove to Kentucky for the eclipse.

  • @donnalevasseur4818
    @donnalevasseur4818 5 років тому

    Maize which is corn is one of those words Long Island where I live has a lot of towns villages and hamlets using Native American Algonquin Iroquios names

  • @shellybauer7889
    @shellybauer7889 2 роки тому

    Hominy is a food produced from dried maize kernels that have been treated with an alkali, in a process called nixtamalization. "Lye hominy" is a type of hominy made with lye

  • @Petunia-Greene
    @Petunia-Greene 5 років тому +4

    I grew up in Ohio in Geauga County. The original spelling was Sheauga and is I am told an Erie Indian word which means “raccoon”. Lake Erie I believe was named after the Erie tribes as well.

    • @christelheadington1136
      @christelheadington1136 5 років тому +4

      I'm in Cuyahoga(crooked river)County,Ohio(beautiful river).

    • @Petunia-Greene
      @Petunia-Greene 5 років тому

      Christel Headington I totally forgot about that one!! Wonder what indigenous tribe that word belongs to?? And yes that river has s really crooked

    • @davids6898
      @davids6898 5 років тому

      Here in Southern California most of the Indian names were renamed by the Spanish settlers. For example the indigenous people had names for Santa Catalina Island, the San Joaquin Hills, and the Santa Ana River which I cannot even pronounce. Even the tribes themselves were renamed - the tribe where I live was originally the named the Tongva but the Spanish renamed it to the Gabrielino, after the San Gabriel Mission which they established in the 1770s and which itself takes its name from the nearby San Gabriel Mountains which had their own Tongva names which have since been hidden or lost and which probably won’t come back if for the fact that these names are so difficult to say or write.

  • @ADGreen-es6hm
    @ADGreen-es6hm 5 років тому

    You have an animal in UK called polecat which are in the same family as Skunks .

  • @angstandvexed
    @angstandvexed 5 років тому +4

    If you do the research, the early colonist drank quite a lot, the belief that the water wasn't safe to drink. It is an interesting piece of history, and why America has had some interesting history with alcohol. I hope you do a video on this topic.

    • @amandag417
      @amandag417 5 років тому +2

      I think it would be interesting to compare the drinking practices of America with England.

    • @NoobsofFredo
      @NoobsofFredo 5 років тому +3

      America - to my knowledge, the only nation founded in a local tavern.

    • @victorwaddell6530
      @victorwaddell6530 5 років тому +1

      @@NoobsofFredo And the idea for a new country was probably written on a beer coaster with a quill pen .

    • @SuperDrLisa
      @SuperDrLisa 5 років тому +1

      @@victorwaddell6530 lolol, not sure coasters were used much then!

    • @bentleyr00d
      @bentleyr00d 5 років тому +1

      The practice came straight from Europe.

  • @joec0914
    @joec0914 5 років тому +1

    Great research on this, sir! It's one thing to know a word came from native languages, but you went the extra mile and tracked down the tribes they came from. I learned several things in this video. I didn't know that skunk, possum, chipmunk, raccoon, others were originally native words. Also I didn't know that several of those animals are indigenous to the Americas, and unknown in Europe. One little pronunciation observation: as I recall in the US we are more like to pronounce Powhatan as, "pow-HAT-in" with the emphasis on the middle syllable. But of course, there's no assurance that the actual native pronunciation was that at all.
    I dare say you could make an entire UA-cam channel out of native American names and their etymology. It's a fascinating subject. Such a shame that so many of those languages have become extinct.
    But a hearty Well done on this video!

  • @otaku-sempai2197
    @otaku-sempai2197 3 роки тому

    We live in a region that has a lot of Native American place-names. My spouse and I are living in Lackawanna, NY (a suburb of Buffalo) which is adjacent to West Seneca. Just a bit to the north is Tonawanda, NY. And of course we are not far from Niagara Falls.

  • @MrJacksjb
    @MrJacksjb 5 років тому +1

    Since you mentioned the Mayflower and whiskey (since they were traveling from England I guess it would be whisky), their intent was to travel towards Virginia but owing to the fact that they were running out of beer they decided to take the more direct route to New England. So the reason that they all nearly starved or froze to death their first winter was because they were out of beer.

  • @applejuice3562
    @applejuice3562 5 років тому +1

    Hurricane, barbecue, canoe, and hammock are native also. Arrowak in origin. They are from carribean islands and Florida

  • @Mikedeela
    @Mikedeela 5 років тому +1

    1:52 Squash is underappreciated, mostly because people have taken to steaming it and such. Squash is much better fried, in my opinion. I especially like squash fritters. There are a bunch of variations, depending upon personal preferences. Give it a try sometime.

  • @ritabroils6190
    @ritabroils6190 5 років тому +1

    Love the t-shirt!

  • @Marcel_Audubon
    @Marcel_Audubon 5 років тому +8

    *Me, I want a hula hoop*

  • @StarSong936
    @StarSong936 4 роки тому

    Squash - I have eaten them both raw and cooked. Pumpkins are in the squash family. One of my favorites it the acorn squash. Cut it in half, scrape out the seeds, fill the hollow with butter, then bake it in the oven for about 1/2 hour. turn it over then bake for another 1/2 hour. Turn it over, sprinkle with salt and pepper, than bake again for 1/2 hour. I forget the baking temperature but if I remember right about 350F. I did this for a friend, and she said it was the best she had ever tasted. How to tell it's ready, if you can put a fork through the outer skin with little resistance, it's done.
    Skunks - I have encountered 2 skunks at close range. One I was on the steps of my apartment and the skunk came out from under the steps. I quickly stepped back and shut the door. The skunk sprayed my door. The other I saw coming in my direction while in the smoking area where I work. I chose to abandon my table in order to stay out of his way.
    Opossums - I have had 2 of those visit me in my house. One of those I fed on my kitchen table. Fascinating animals. Although wild, and not socialized at all, one of them did let me touch it.
    Chipmunks - Also known as ground squirrels, While they can climb trees, they generally don't. I have had them sit on my legs begging for food which they would take from my hand. This was in a state park where people would feed them on a regular basis. Outside of a special situation like that, they will run away if you try to approach them.
    Raccoons - One of my uncles had one as a pet. They are highly intelligent, and curious about the world around them. They can also cause a lot of destruction in a hurry due to their very nature. They can open simple latches on cage doors. Generally, don't mess with them, they will go on the attack if the perceive you as a threat.

  • @bakerbaggertagger
    @bakerbaggertagger 4 роки тому

    Geronimo! What people yell when jumping in for a swim. LOL That is where I thought you were going, silly me.

  • @alisgray
    @alisgray 5 років тому +3

    Lawrence, have you ever been to a pow wow?

  • @virgilfroehrig9665
    @virgilfroehrig9665 5 років тому +1

    If you have any fascination with native American contributions to modern society... Look up the book called Indian givers.
    Yes... It may not sound right... But once you read it then you will realize the irony.
    The follow-up book is also a great read.
    Have yourselves a great day.

  • @disfuncionexe
    @disfuncionexe 4 роки тому

    Outside Livingston (mt) theirs a mountain range called the abzorkes.
    I'm not sure how to spell it (I have a form of disleksia(disgraphia))

  • @sirsmartypants7086
    @sirsmartypants7086 5 років тому

    Hominy? Hmm? Never heard of that one. All of the rest had no idea that they were indian words. Anothet great job! Hoping you do another!

  • @BuickDoc
    @BuickDoc 5 років тому

    In other parts of the 'New World', other settlers found non-Algonquin speakers had names for the o'possum, such as tlacuachi (tla-kwatch-i) from the Aztec (Nahuatl) language. Spanish speakers in Northern Mexico and Texas use that word today. Many do not pronounce the 'l' in 'tla', so pronounce it ta-kwatch-i.

  • @chrisk5651
    @chrisk5651 Рік тому

    Pumpkin is a squash and the best one at that. Also zucchini is one too. In the New York metro area, we use that term but when I started working at a supermarket as a cashier they had it listed as green squash. We also have yellow squash but no special name - is that true for the UK, I know that they use courgette for zucchini but is that just for the green or also yellow too.

  • @badguy1481
    @badguy1481 5 років тому +3

    Including...the names of Midwestern cities like "Milwaukee"...."Chicago". And how about some Wisconsin towns: Oconomowoc...Wawatosa...Sauk..Menominee.

    • @cjpietropinto9293
      @cjpietropinto9293 5 років тому

      Chicago isn't in the Midwest.
      Midwest is historically defined at "west of the Mississippi river."
      Look it up for yourself.

    • @badguy1481
      @badguy1481 5 років тому +1

      @@cjpietropinto9293 I did...
      "midwestern
      1
      adj of a region of the United States generally including Ohio; Indiana; Illinois; Iowa; Missouri; Kansas; Nebraska; and sometimes Michigan; Wisconsin; Minnesota"

    • @archenema6792
      @archenema6792 5 років тому

      George Carlin's favorite, from New Jersey: Piscataway.

    • @archenema6792
      @archenema6792 5 років тому

      @@cjpietropinto9293 I'm from Pittsburgh. It was once consider the far West, now it's considered the most western Eastern city.

    • @awesomelyshorticles
      @awesomelyshorticles 4 роки тому

      Omaha, Nebraska
      Sioux City in south Dakota

  • @anieanton7266
    @anieanton7266 5 років тому

    Many street names and half the towns of RI are of native decent. There is one particular street that is a cut through for several towns. So, a street quite commonly used to give directions. A street name that is a bit difficult to say and throws you off if you have never heard of it, especially because of it's more simple surrounding roads. what there are 2 types of people: maybe 3.... One is: people can can pronounce this street with ease. two: ones who know it and can't even try to say it. and three: out of towners that look at you like you just had a stroke.
    Woonascquatucket street. I love this road. besides it's a nice cutthrough, it is also awesome to give directions to people who never heard of it.
    "So, when you get to near the end of main street, left onto smith street: follow smith street to the roundabout, take the 2nd exit on to route 44, then a slight right onto woonascquatucket."
    "Sorry, what?"
    "woonascquatucket"
    "god bless you?"
    "it's a road"
    "well i guess i will be able to see the sign from far away"
    "oh, the name is too long to get a sign. Infact most of what i said has no signs, so let me give it to ya the ol' RI way of directions..:
    *takes a deep breath* so after coming down the hill, take a left where the dunkin donuts use to be, follow the road until the roundabout, after you can't see the sign to the yatch club soda company, get off that road right there, as you come around there is a tree that blocks the town clock, that road opens up slightly to the right, you know you are on the right road because as soon as you turn on it you can see the clock and the one way sign, can't go back until you get to the walgreens which looks more like an old brick factory until you drive past it to see the sign."

  • @osuasheuatl
    @osuasheuatl 5 років тому

    You should definitely read The Sot-Weed Factor, a novel by John Barth. It's the journey of an English poet and his misadventures in the Maryland colonies, featuring John Smith, the advent of tobacco, lusty pirates, and oh so much more!

  • @jonrolfson1686
    @jonrolfson1686 4 роки тому +1

    One might mention the curious case of Alces alces, the largest (by body size) of extant deer. Though known in northern EurAsia as 'Elk" (or variations thereof), early English migrants for some reason favored the Narraganset 'moos' or 'moosu' (bark-stripper), resulting in 'Moose.'
    The good olde english appellation 'Elk' was repurposed and given to North American representatives of the next largest of the deer species, Cervus canadensis. The Cree/Shawnee (Algonquian) name 'Wapiti' is gaining ground as a way to refer to Cervus canadensis, but 'Elk' still predominates.

  • @Daveomabegin
    @Daveomabegin Рік тому

    Omg, emo Lawrence! ❤️❤️

  • @docbrown7916
    @docbrown7916 3 роки тому

    Cool shirt !

  • @PegR38
    @PegR38 4 роки тому

    Sorry if you'e already done Native America place names, but a city very close to me in Michigan is Muskegon. The name "Muskegon" is derived from the Ottawa tribe term "Masquigon," meaning "marshy river or swamp" And, just south of Muskegon is the county of Ottawa

  • @stephenwoodman6015
    @stephenwoodman6015 5 років тому

    I have seen a few possums in New England , but I think they are just now immigrating here from the South

  • @benw9949
    @benw9949 5 років тому

    So if squash (gourd-like vegetable/fruit) is not related to the verb, to squash, what about the noun for the game of squash? What's the etymology for those two? Now I'm curious that we have three words spelled and sounded the same way, yet quite different in meaning and possibly origin.

  • @barbaramatthews4735
    @barbaramatthews4735 4 роки тому +1

    I've eaten summer squash and zucchini raw. Most of the time I prefer it cooked.
    One thing you missed about opossums is that they are the only marsupial animals native to the America's.
    "Opossum" is the common spelling with the letter "O" being silent/not pronounced.

  • @stephaniehight2771
    @stephaniehight2771 4 роки тому +1

    @5:49 You mention you have never encountered a possum, so here is my possum encounter story. About 13 years ago, in Louisiana, I opened my silverware drawer (why, I don't know, as at the time, my husband and I were exclusively using plastic cutlery) and saw an animal. It hissed at me, and in a tone of mixed fear and horror I exclaimed, "There is a CREATURE in the silverware drawer!" Thre reason I used "creature" was because I was unsure of the species of the animal. My husband heroically trapped the animal in a garbage can and released it a mile away in a nearby city park. I researched the animal online and discovered it was a possum. Three days later, I walked into my kitchen and observed my two cats, Boots and Tabby, meekly watching while another (I presume) possum ate THEIR food from THEIR dish. I immediately fired them from their traditional job of pest controllers. They didn't appear to upset by this. Cats! My husband purchased a humane animal trap, and in that week we captured two more possums in the trap, both of which were released in the near by park.

  • @esprit15d
    @esprit15d 5 років тому

    I'm from the area of Jamestown (my sister visited the settlement this past Monday), and those Powhatan words are familiar to me. If you want to see a possum in real life, stop by my neighborhood, especially after setting out a bowl of cat food.
    Also, you're hilarious.

  • @paulceglinski3087
    @paulceglinski3087 2 роки тому

    Love all your vids, Lawrence. Shaw said it best that we, the British and the Americans, are separated by a common language. Cheers.

  • @BostonBobby1961
    @BostonBobby1961 5 років тому

    We have a lake here in eastern Massachusetts called Lake Quannapowitt, which is located in Wakefield, MA. We have a combination of Native American names and English towns such as Wakefield, Plymouth, Gloucester. Probably named after their English counterparts. After All this is New England. LOL

  • @thecosplaycrafter8017
    @thecosplaycrafter8017 Рік тому

    Now I'm curious if the name for the sport squash is at all related to the name of the fruit.