THAT'S OKAY because when Dave does debunking, he purposely keeps the information in the junior high or even elementary School understanding level so EVERYONE can understand... BUT as Dave himself would say,, it's EXCELLENT that you're here and just listening casually you'll still learn something...🙏👍
@@duck6100 When debunking flat earthers,, Dave only HAS to use elementary school science lol ... obviously when debunking creationists it gets into college or even university level but most of Dave's rebuttal points are about jr high level.... that was kinda the op's point,, that the tutorials are MUCH more difficult....
@@AncientRe yeah that's my point. Dave's pronunciation is totally fine because people understand what he's referring to. Just because he has an American accent which by the way is a million times more understandable and legible than British accents
@@hughmongous5089 Not arguing over his pronunciation but it is absolutely not true that American accents are ‘a million times’ more legible and understandable than British ones. It absolutely depends on where you’re from and how you’ve learnt English. Lots of people I know use subtitles on US TV shows because they struggle with the accent. I’m sure the reverse is also true. Also, in both the US and the UK there are vast differences in accents across regions (particularly in the UK since it’s small but has hundreds of dialects) so you can’t really compare the two. For example, RP English is probably not going to give people as many problems as a deep southern US accent. Similarly, someone from LA is way more understandable to more people than a Scouse, who even people in the UK have issues with, because it’s an accent developed by Liverpool’s proximity to Ireland. Also the word legible doesn’t have anything to do with accents lol
@@duck6100 legible isn't the right word. Intelligible or comprehensible is what I should've said, my bad. And yeah maybe I should've explained my point in detail: generally speaking to people who don't have English as a first language, standard American English tends to be easier to pick up and understand, not southern American or new York American or Midwest American. Just the standard one everyone's familiar with and everyone's familiar with it because it's used in movies everywhere and songs and all sorts of media, media that everyone around the world has consumed generally. British media isnt as popular. That's one point, another point is how the words are sounded and the slang itself. American English is less muffled and the vowels are sounded out more. And yeah there's many dialects to British English from scot to Welsh to Irish to midlands to London but really unless you know English quite well, you couldn't really understand most of the British dialects. Yes it depends on where and how you learnt English and this is all generally speaking but I've lived in quite a lot of countries where English isn't the language and from my experience the people tend to understand American English better (went to Spain, Italy, Switzerland, Arab countries, Asian countries, pacific countries) So just going off of my experience over the decades. But if you have English as your first language then absolutely it depends on where you grew up but I'm taking for those that don't.
Prof. Dave is a Information “BOSS”
I just realized i dont understand a damn thing Dave is saying when hes not making fun of charlatans.
THAT'S OKAY because when Dave does debunking, he purposely keeps the information in the junior high or even elementary School understanding level so EVERYONE can understand... BUT as Dave himself would say,, it's EXCELLENT that you're here and just listening casually you'll still learn something...🙏👍
@@micnorton9487 lmao I wouldn’t say elementary school level
@@duck6100 When debunking flat earthers,, Dave only HAS to use elementary school science lol ... obviously when debunking creationists it gets into college or even university level but most of Dave's rebuttal points are about jr high level.... that was kinda the op's point,, that the tutorials are MUCH more difficult....
Oh thank God I almost thought I was the only one. I both admire and fear how smart Dave is 😂😂😂 I love his videos tho
Sweet
Hint: the answer is a frequent ingredient in Terrance Howard’s word salad.
(Two completely different things, but I hope you can at least get the joke)
Next Lesson: What are acoustics? 😂 Dave I'm begging you to add something other than absorption into your recording space!
Anyone who is not from india then
like here
👇
Car bon eel! What - car bon isle - stop mangling the English language!
Newsflash, countries exist outside of the UK
@@AncientRe yeah that's my point. Dave's pronunciation is totally fine because people understand what he's referring to.
Just because he has an American accent which by the way is a million times more understandable and legible than British accents
@@hughmongous5089 Not arguing over his pronunciation but it is absolutely not true that American accents are ‘a million times’ more legible and understandable than British ones. It absolutely depends on where you’re from and how you’ve learnt English. Lots of people I know use subtitles on US TV shows because they struggle with the accent. I’m sure the reverse is also true. Also, in both the US and the UK there are vast differences in accents across regions (particularly in the UK since it’s small but has hundreds of dialects) so you can’t really compare the two. For example, RP English is probably not going to give people as many problems as a deep southern US accent. Similarly, someone from LA is way more understandable to more people than a Scouse, who even people in the UK have issues with, because it’s an accent developed by Liverpool’s proximity to Ireland. Also the word legible doesn’t have anything to do with accents lol
@@duck6100 legible isn't the right word. Intelligible or comprehensible is what I should've said, my bad.
And yeah maybe I should've explained my point in detail: generally speaking to people who don't have English as a first language, standard American English tends to be easier to pick up and understand, not southern American or new York American or Midwest American. Just the standard one everyone's familiar with and everyone's familiar with it because it's used in movies everywhere and songs and all sorts of media, media that everyone around the world has consumed generally. British media isnt as popular.
That's one point, another point is how the words are sounded and the slang itself. American English is less muffled and the vowels are sounded out more.
And yeah there's many dialects to British English from scot to Welsh to Irish to midlands to London but really unless you know English quite well, you couldn't really understand most of the British dialects.
Yes it depends on where and how you learnt English and this is all generally speaking but I've lived in quite a lot of countries where English isn't the language and from my experience the people tend to understand American English better (went to Spain, Italy, Switzerland, Arab countries, Asian countries, pacific countries)
So just going off of my experience over the decades.
But if you have English as your first language then absolutely it depends on where you grew up but I'm taking for those that don't.