Where does punctuation come from?!

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 11 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,3 тис.

  • @RobWords
    @RobWords  24 дні тому +47

    Got an idea for new punctuation marks‽ Comment below. And get that EXCLUSIVE NordVPN deal + 4 months extra here → nordvpn.com/robwordsVPN It’s risk-free with Nord’s 30-day money-back guarantee!!! ✌

    • @Roope00
      @Roope00 24 дні тому +10

      That transition the sponsor segment was amazing, caught me off guard.

    • @timbeard8457
      @timbeard8457 23 дні тому +3

      I like your ‽ there. Would be perfect for "Are you kidding me‽" providing the stress of the exclamation mark, but also the correct use of the question mark.

    • @Azivegu
      @Azivegu 23 дні тому +5

      How about why Spanish uses inverted characters at the beginning of sentences?

    • @jonadabtheunsightly
      @jonadabtheunsightly 23 дні тому +5

      In a couple hundred more years, who knows what could happen? Traditional punctuation marks may entirely give way to emoji.

    • @victoriaeads6126
      @victoriaeads6126 23 дні тому +3

      I will forever be convinced that the question mark actually came from people watching cats curve their tails when they are curious...with their butt on display right below. 😂😂

  • @tolyo96
    @tolyo96 25 днів тому +897

    3:22 "You see, they'd written this book called the Bible and it was like a Bible to them" this sounds so much like a Jay Foreman joke

    • @leftmono1016
      @leftmono1016 25 днів тому +182

      They read it religiously.

    • @trien30
      @trien30 25 днів тому +12

      Bible: Shouldn't that first word be written and pronounced in Aramaic or Hebrew, then the second one written and pronounced in Ancient Greek? Just so you know, the Christian bible is only 1/5 of the one written in Hebrew: if the modern English Bible has 66 books, doesn't that mean the Hebrew bible is 5 times as long. Adults do not use the dots and dashes called niqquds in Hebrew and materis lectionis ("mother reader" in Latin, I might have spelled the Latin incorrectly) which are visual aids/pronunciation guides used to help Jewish children and foreigners learn to read in Hebrew.

    • @RobWords
      @RobWords  25 днів тому +289

      High praise indeed! We went to the same university, so maybe it's how we were taught...

    • @betzalelbrook8948
      @betzalelbrook8948 25 днів тому +8

      The Hebrew bible only has 36 books (traditionally counted as only 24, actually!); and you're right about the Niqqud being used mostly for children, but in modern Hebrew people actually use MORE matres lectionis​ than should be used with Niqqud. Also, in many words the matres lectionis are an official part of the spelling, and it would be wrong to write a word without them.@@trien30

    • @betzalelbrook8948
      @betzalelbrook8948 25 днів тому +7

      Also, since you've started a thread about Hebrew and the hebrew bible: It has it's own set of punctuation! It's also used to indicate the melody of reading the text, but mainly it's a punctuation system. The most interesting things about it is it has many many specific rules, and also has 4 different levels of breaks, known as Emperors (קֵיסָרִים, Qesarim), Kings (מְלָכִים, Mlakhin), Seconds [like a second in command] (מִשְׁנִים, Mishnim), and Thirds (שָׁלִישִׁים, Shalishim [which is an old army position, it appears a few times in the bible; there's actually an HR officer position in the IDF named after it]); every level further divides the part of the sentence the one above it created (same as a comma can only divide within a sentence, which is itself marked by a full stop)

  • @riggerthegeek
    @riggerthegeek 25 днів тому +1314

    It is amazing to think that a space had to be invented

    • @AnPrionsaBeag
      @AnPrionsaBeag 25 днів тому +153

      They probably didn't use spaces to actually save space on expensive paper or stone..

    • @riggerthegeek
      @riggerthegeek 25 днів тому +22

      @@AnPrionsaBeag quite possibly.

    • @dave3gan
      @dave3gan 25 днів тому +24

      ​@AnPrionsaBeag judging by your name you may be interested to know that it was Irish monks who first used the spaces, just checked and that's what Wikipedia says

    • @AppleTom9091
      @AppleTom9091 25 днів тому +28

      There are times when you need to have something visible to show a 'space'.
      When coding computer programs, especially when display layout mattered, we would use this ␣

    • @Onionbaron
      @Onionbaron 25 днів тому +29

      "Space The Final Frontier..." - Star Trek

  • @Itisstillok
    @Itisstillok 23 дні тому +74

    I came because of the intriguing topic, i stayed because of the incredible presentation of the topic, charisma, humor, editing, and graphic component

  • @cogspace
    @cogspace 24 дні тому +94

    > Ancient scribes used this shape to mark important text, especially quotes
    > Email ends up reinventing the same thing
    > That gets inherited into imageboards as "greentext"
    > Now it's in Markdown, which everyone is learning because of Discord and other programs
    > my face when

    • @NonTwinBrothers
      @NonTwinBrothers 24 дні тому +11

      Speaking of computers I'm really surprised he didn't mention Ascii merging all 4 hypen lengths into one and doing away with angles quotes.

    • @zaek2144
      @zaek2144 21 день тому +5

      ​@@NonTwinBrothers poor « » :(

    • @littelcreatchure506
      @littelcreatchure506 19 днів тому +3

      ​@@NonTwinBrothers I still see a lot of people, especially people who don't speak English as a first language, still use the angle quotes so they're not completely dead

    • @TheOriginalSnial
      @TheOriginalSnial 14 днів тому +1

      @@NonTwinBrothers well, if you have a Mac option+\ => « and shift+option+\ => ». «manifique!». But there is a good use for angled quotes if you want to embed quotes in quotes. .oO(I also use increasingly bigger circles to represent thought bubbles.)

    • @woodfur00
      @woodfur00 8 днів тому

      @@TheOriginalSnial Yep and option+- => - and shift+option+- => -. I use them constantly, sure you can get your point across with bargain bin dashes but it still looks better to do it right

  • @il-dottore
    @il-dottore 24 дні тому +38

    17:18 Slight correction: Old English's possessive was -es, not just an -s (hund -> hundes, scip -> scipes, Thunor -> Thunres)
    The apostrophe likely came from abbreviating out that E

    • @katherineozbirn6622
      @katherineozbirn6622 20 днів тому +3

      Interesting. I'd like to read more. Can you post the source, please??

    • @Dreamheart101
      @Dreamheart101 19 днів тому

      I would like the source as well!
      If you can't link it, can you tell us what to search for? Search engines have gotten wirse in quality so an exact title of the source would be helpful :)

    • @PhilosophyVajda
      @PhilosophyVajda 19 днів тому +4

      This my impression as well. In German, the roof of the house would be "das Dach des Hauses". The '-es' appended to 'Haus' would, in English, get an apostrophe instead of the 'e', which just leaves apostrophe + s.

    • @michab4083
      @michab4083 19 днів тому +2

      ​@@PhilosophyVajdaPlus, in German, there are many examples of words for which you can use either "-s" or "-es" to denote the possesive case (preference most likely being regional), for example, "des Tages" vs. "des Tags". In my view, the long-term tendency is toward the shorter versions (omitting the "e").

    • @scintillam_dei
      @scintillam_dei 17 днів тому

      Stop trying to see meaning where there IS none, you religious case.

  • @RussellFlowers
    @RussellFlowers 25 днів тому +703

    That was such a slick segue into the sponsor that I didn't fast forward over the ad.

    • @WDCallahan
      @WDCallahan 25 днів тому +16

      There was an ad?

    • @angeliaparish
      @angeliaparish 25 днів тому +7

      I know! got me!

    • @OzCrusader
      @OzCrusader 25 днів тому +6

      Didn’t catch me out. Jumped over the ad😬

    • @R08Tam
      @R08Tam 25 днів тому +3

      Note the number plate of my Morris Minor. They really should sponsor me.

    • @renelopez8227
      @renelopez8227 25 днів тому +12

      Since they can tell where people fast forward the video, I never do it. I feel like if they have enough people stick around for the ads they're less likely to get dropped by sponsors. Seeing how I seldom part with my money, it's the least I can do

  • @No1sonuk
    @No1sonuk 25 днів тому +425

    I remember a while ago Microsoft Word had a conflict between the grammar checker and the spell checker.
    If you typed "crosschecked", the spell checker said it should be hyphenated. If you typed "cross-checked", the grammar checker said it should be one word!

    • @roderickmain9697
      @roderickmain9697 25 днів тому +11

    • @davidioanhedges
      @davidioanhedges 25 днів тому +18

      Oddly cross-check is correct ... but crosschecked is also correct ... we are at a nexus

    • @No1sonuk
      @No1sonuk 25 днів тому +5

      @@davidioanhedges It was shaping up to be a "Kirk vs computer" moment!

    • @clarencetaylor7455
      @clarencetaylor7455 25 днів тому +21

      But what did clippy say?

    • @MichaelMcAlexander
      @MichaelMcAlexander 25 днів тому +9

      Context is everything. The evolution of language should be progressive toward clarity and nonambiguity. In the case of "cross-check", with a hyphen, the two verbs "cross" and "check" are being used as a compound verb (Britannica currently confirms this usage). To remove the hyphen would make the word "cross" an adjective, so "cross check" would be to "check with anger". Lastly, to remove the hyphen and make the word a compound word "crosscheck" is the most logical progression since the phrase "to cross-check" has a popular connotation. People have a tendency to abbreviate out of torpidity rather than convenience. They also like to take a noun and use it as a verb (like google). The worst propensity is to make up words (like frenemy); though, perhaps using words improperly (like fire) is a bit more egregious. :| >> Book of nouns dot com

  • @martinbruce5979
    @martinbruce5979 25 днів тому +179

    "It just looks harder than a semi" 6:28
    Oh Rob, you sure are excited about colons.

    • @tamaspolyak5564
      @tamaspolyak5564 24 дні тому +7

      Caught that one, lol.

    • @gemmabartlett3908
      @gemmabartlett3908 24 дні тому +7

      I laughed out loud and got a confused look from my partner 😂

    • @Fiskene
      @Fiskene 24 дні тому +6

      I don't often remember to "like" UA-cam videos, but that line deserved it.

    • @zs0sz
      @zs0sz 22 дні тому +1

      I'm glad somebody else pointed that out!

    • @mendmywings7238
      @mendmywings7238 22 дні тому +2

      ​@gemmabartlett3908 i laughed and got a weird look from my cat lol

  • @SEThatered
    @SEThatered 23 дні тому +44

    Every video RobWords releases is a treat to me.
    The writing, editing, composition and his rhetorical skills are simply superb.
    The world stops existing for me while I watch it.

    • @katherineozbirn6622
      @katherineozbirn6622 20 днів тому +4

      Yes, the videos are oases of thought, fun, and intelligence. They are respites amidst the chaos of the lack of intelligence out there. Could we just stop bickering and get on to getting to the Moon and Mars? There's so much civilization to advance, and we just backslid, it seems, all of the time.

    • @Stizel-Swik
      @Stizel-Swik 12 днів тому

      @@katherineozbirn6622 spot on "backsliding".

  • @TheSoonyGirl
    @TheSoonyGirl 23 дні тому +58

    In 1994 I didn’t want to go to school, but in 2024 I spend all day watching Robswords! ❤

    • @Bailark
      @Bailark 17 днів тому +2

      It seems that language is an acquired taste. As a toddler, you would mash Cheerios into your face with either convenient hand, and as an adult, you pair spirits with cigars or wines with stinky cheeses.

    • @DenkyManner
      @DenkyManner 15 днів тому +1

      Same for me. The common theme being avoiding work

  • @begreat22
    @begreat22 25 днів тому +151

    6:49 the greatest ad transition of all time

    • @realmarker
      @realmarker 21 день тому +1

      Real

    • @kaetea3939
      @kaetea3939 19 днів тому +1

      Looking for this comment so I could say I agreed lol.

    • @JRios270
      @JRios270 16 днів тому

      @@kaetea3939 Same! haha that transition was elite

  • @beckerderbacker4976
    @beckerderbacker4976 25 днів тому +124

    The exclamation mark wasn't often present on older typewriters, having to be formed by the combination of a period and an apostrophe. This was because the mark was not as commonly used back then. Another fun fact about typewriters is that the apostrophe was often in a much more inconvenient location than today and was rarely its own key. This was because contractions were used less 100 or so years ago and the apostrophe was mostly reserved for possession.

    • @garyswan
      @garyswan 25 днів тому +23

      And the weird thing about contractions is that they change the word order too. 'Don't you see' expanded would be 'Do not you see' rather than 'Do you not see'. And just to save writing a single letter...

    • @grizwoldphantasia5005
      @grizwoldphantasia5005 25 днів тому +15

      Other common key-saving measures on old typewriters was skipping zero (use capital O, possibly backspacing and overstriking a slash) and skipping one (use lower case l).
      I worked at a computer company in the late 70s, and one of the beta customers was an old manual typewriter user. He'd call up about once a week to gripe that software didn't recognize when O/0 meant the other. My friend could defuse him in seconds with things like, "I'm just the monkey, you need to talk to the organ grinder" and I didn't have the patience for that on a weekly basis.

    • @karphin1
      @karphin1 24 дні тому +5

      Yes, I remember my Mom’s old Hermes typewriter being like that! You had to put in the apostrophe then backspace for the period!

    • @unclestephen2722
      @unclestephen2722 23 дні тому +3

      You say that contractions were less used but 200 years ago, in the time of Jane Austin, they were common. So it is, Sir, all the more annoying that no one seems to use them in period costume dramas.

    • @willemslie
      @willemslie 23 дні тому +4

      Manual typewriters often didn't have a figure 1 either. You substituted a lower-case L.

  • @LinusBoman
    @LinusBoman 25 днів тому +240

    If you made a mug that said "Oh silly apostrophe, what are you doing there?" I would add it to my shopping cart.

    • @CliffSedge-nu5fv
      @CliffSedge-nu5fv 25 днів тому +38

      Apostrophes are so abused in modern writing. It makes me irrationally angry to see apostrophes used to pluralize words.

    • @RobWords
      @RobWords  25 днів тому +96

      Its as good as made.
      *it's

    • @JimFixedIt4Me
      @JimFixedIt4Me 25 днів тому +22

      ​@@CliffSedge-nu5fv it really annoy's me

    • @asailijhijr
      @asailijhijr 25 днів тому +12

      @@RobWords My biggest pet-peeve about English (or the dialect I've been taught) is the perceived swapping of "it's" and "its".
      Hmm, maybe that's unclear. The meaning associated with "it's" matches better with the spelling "its", and the meaning associated with "its" matches better with the spelling "it's"; this is all in my opinion.

    • @s-x5373
      @s-x5373 25 днів тому +3

      @@asailijhijr as the video explain, apostrophe is for missing thing, while s after word is for possession and didnt need apostrophe originally.
      So you got it reversed.
      It's : 's -> is
      its : (s)possesion of it
      his->hes I guess too

  • @MeridaBrandybuck
    @MeridaBrandybuck 24 дні тому +16

    “‘Multiple exclamation marks,’ he went on, shaking his head, ‘are a sure sign of a diseased mind.’” - Terry Pratchett

    • @tulliusexmisc2191
      @tulliusexmisc2191 18 днів тому +1

      Of course, a main character in one of his books ended every sentence with an exclamation mark.

    • @MeridaBrandybuck
      @MeridaBrandybuck 9 днів тому

      @@tulliusexmisc2191 Ooh, I haven’t gotten to that one yet. Which book is it?

    • @tulliusexmisc2191
      @tulliusexmisc2191 9 днів тому

      @@MeridaBrandybuck Maskerade. To be honest, I haven't read that one for a while, and I can't remember whether it was literally every sentence, but they certainly infested that character's speech - and even singing.

    • @eekee6034
      @eekee6034 7 днів тому

      I use multiple exclamation marks all the time, but I can't disagree. ;)

  • @richardhallyburton
    @richardhallyburton 24 дні тому +4

    I believe in the law of conservation of apostrophes. For every apostrophe wrongly omitted, there is, somewhere in the universe, one wrongly inserted.

  • @plankton50
    @plankton50 25 днів тому +160

    I genuinely find grammar, punctuation and pronunciation way more enjoyable as a subject taught like history or science rather than it being this prescriptive chore or set of rules you have to learn and dutifully follow.
    I'm learning a foreign language and it's the approach I want to take.

    • @Robin-Dabank696
      @Robin-Dabank696 24 дні тому +5

      Yeah I do think etymology can help with memorising words at times, but researching etymologies is too difficult that it isn't worth the effort

    • @SpeedyGwen
      @SpeedyGwen 23 дні тому +1

      what language are u learning btw ?

  • @prof113
    @prof113 25 днів тому +189

    "Plus, what is the dot supposed to represent?" I died!

  • @waynegjohnston
    @waynegjohnston 25 днів тому +59

    14:26 The tension breaks when the dot on Rob's right shoulder disappears.

  • @connorjames5190
    @connorjames5190 24 дні тому +12

    10:36 In Japanese, "yo" (よ) is used to add exclaim to a sentence, too.

  • @josephang9927
    @josephang9927 23 дні тому +2

    Interesting how writing was just a guideline for memory for so long, then writing became more autonomous as a communication medium, so grammar became very important to avoid ambiguity.

  • @JerridCook
    @JerridCook 25 днів тому +73

    I love that I can take a few minutes out of my day to watch one of these videos and learn so much neat information!

  • @isaiahbaker4910
    @isaiahbaker4910 25 днів тому +51

    6:29 Cheeky cheeky

    • @DanielMasmanian
      @DanielMasmanian 25 днів тому +1

      Shameful; or, shameless? You decide: answers on a postcard.

    • @roderickmain9697
      @roderickmain9697 25 днів тому +4

      @@DanielMasmanian does that depend on who is full of shame - usually the person hearing is ashamed for the speaker being shameless, 🤣

    • @wyrdsystems
      @wyrdsystems 25 днів тому +1

      Came to the comments to say something similar

    • @leftmono1016
      @leftmono1016 25 днів тому

      Cheeky, or simply a statement of fact 🤷‍♂️

    • @DimaMuskind
      @DimaMuskind 25 днів тому

      I didn't get it; can someone explain, please?

  • @michaelturner2806
    @michaelturner2806 25 днів тому +18

    I remember feeling very clever long ago when World of Warcraft was new. The class Warlock was a demon fueled magic user that could eventually juggle Damage Over Time spells - that is, spells you would cast once and instead of doing a burst of damage, every few seconds it would do a little bit of damage for its listed duration. Since I always kept up three DoTs, I named my character Ellipsis.

  • @lady_draguliana784
    @lady_draguliana784 24 дні тому +16

    "No Photo Available" on aged parchment was hilarious! 🤣

  • @gjamdz
    @gjamdz 24 дні тому +5

    Great video. In Spanish we have opening marks for question and exclamation, ¿ and ¡. They are used less and less mainly because of the use of keyboards and lazyness 😁.
    And since we're here, the ellipsis is called "puntos suspensivos" something like "suspense dots". When you translate that literally is kind of poetic

  • @NickSturtz
    @NickSturtz 25 днів тому +239

    As a computer programmer, I use many of the lesser-used punctuation marks on a daily basis. Semi-colons denoting the end of a line of code are used in many languages (Java, JavaScript, C, C++, etc.). Brackets [], “curly braces” {}, and parentheses are also used to group code together. Even more obscure ones like the carrot ^ tilde ~ and tick ` are used. Note: I am using programmer names for these 😂

    • @MrMudbill
      @MrMudbill 25 днів тому +80

      I think you mean caret, not carrot 🥕 although they are pronounced the same.

    • @douglasphillips5870
      @douglasphillips5870 25 днів тому +16

      Computers are notoriously bad at deciphering meaning from context clues alone.

    • @roderickmain9697
      @roderickmain9697 25 днів тому +5

      @@MrMudbill - also appears as an uparrow in some character sets.

    • @michaelstreeter3125
      @michaelstreeter3125 25 днів тому +16

      @@MrMudbill You pronounce caret the same as carrot? Seriously?! 😆

    • @I_Don_t_want_a_handle
      @I_Don_t_want_a_handle 25 днів тому +6

      Bang. Though it really should be 'silence' ...

  • @xandyrwlkyr2563
    @xandyrwlkyr2563 25 днів тому +10

    Ok, not only did you make a lecture about punctuation actually interesting. You provided the most clear explanation of the difference between a colon and semi-colon I have seen while seamlessly flowing into an advertisement. I would say that counts as two miracles.

  • @Vim-Wolf
    @Vim-Wolf 25 днів тому +23

    Pendulous dangly bits is now my text notification.

    • @Brunoburningbright
      @Brunoburningbright 25 днів тому +3

      It could have been lifted from a Monty Python skit.

    • @laurabetts8714
      @laurabetts8714 21 день тому +1

      Put that on a mug or T-shirt!
      ! too much? Am I laughing at my own joke?

  • @monkpato
    @monkpato 15 днів тому +2

    That intro to the plug was so smooth I actually watched it without skipping ahead!

  • @bazcuda
    @bazcuda 23 дні тому +1

    That was such a good segue into the NordVPN pitch that I watched it instead of skipping it even though I've been a NordVPN customer for years 😂

  • @kazmanscoop
    @kazmanscoop 25 днів тому +36

    Rob, you are an excellent educator, period (intended)

  • @letmejustsay
    @letmejustsay 25 днів тому +35

    Always fascinating information with a touch of subtle humour. I love this channel.

    • @JayTemple
      @JayTemple 24 дні тому +2

      I laughed the hardest when he mentioned the Library of Alexandria and we heard a voice say "Shhh."

  • @seanhollandcanada
    @seanhollandcanada 25 днів тому +15

    I very much admire the scripting and the natural, engaging delivery. The structure of the lesson is masterful, as is the case with Rob's other videos. Any classroom would be very lucky to have this guy standing at the front and making stuff that often bores students to death interesting. Hmm, that last sentence could perhaps have benefited from some punctuation...

  • @katyvdb5993
    @katyvdb5993 21 день тому +2

    18:28 You reminded me of M. R. James' dig at over-use of the ellipsis: 'Dots are believed by many writers of our day to be a good substitute for effective writing. They are certainly an easy one. Let us have a few more...'

  • @InigoQuilez
    @InigoQuilez 24 дні тому +29

    ¿When did the inverted question and exclamation marks got introduced in Spanish? They are really useful, ¡English should adopt them too!

  • @berndbrotify
    @berndbrotify 25 днів тому +103

    In German, we still just add an "s" to the end of a name to mark possession. It's just "Peters Haus". However, some time ago people started using an apostrophe there, probably because they learned in their English classes. We actually call this error a "Deppenapostroph" (dorks apostrophe).
    The only place where it's actually correct to use an apostrophe to mark possession is, when the name ends in an "s", as we then omit the second "s" and replace it with the apostrophe: "Hans' Haus" instead of "Hanss Haus".

    • @D4BASCHT
      @D4BASCHT 24 дні тому +17

      " 's" is valid since 1996 if a name would be otherwise ambiguous like "Andrea's". And it’s not really that much English influence, it’s only wrong since 1901 and was used before that. 1833 there was a release of "Goethe's Werke". We also regularly use apostrophe in adjective forms like "Grimm'sche Märchen", which originally had Es there.

    • @lukmigindnuforhelved
      @lukmigindnuforhelved 24 дні тому +7

      Hanß Haus ? :D

    • @Carewolf
      @Carewolf 24 дні тому +5

      North germanic possesive. I always found it curious in German and most grammar books pretends it doesn't exist

    • @juliaclaire42
      @juliaclaire42 24 дні тому

      ​@@lukmigindnuforhelvedArgh... No.

    • @loisdungey3528
      @loisdungey3528 23 дні тому +1

      Using an apostrophe instead of a 2nd 's', was how we were taught in the 60's and 70's.

  • @Nexus_545
    @Nexus_545 25 днів тому +90

    That sponsor segue got me good. Well played.
    I now know why I've never in my life used a semi-colon. I probably just always use a full stop / period.

    • @scaper8
      @scaper8 25 днів тому +6

      I saw it coming from the semicolon example, but still gave a, "Well played, sir, well played," when it came.

    • @Vyrlokar
      @Vyrlokar 25 днів тому +8

      One use of the semicolon that isn't mentioned is to make lists of lists
      "I need you to do some shopping for me: apples, pears and peaches from the greengrocer; and beef and mutton from the butcher"

    • @Brunoburningbright
      @Brunoburningbright 25 днів тому +1

      The first time that a sponsors interruption didn't cause me to roll my eyes in exasperation.

    • @lazerbungalow
      @lazerbungalow 25 днів тому +1

      It was indeed one of the better played sponsor segues I have seen.

    • @zzzaphod8507
      @zzzaphod8507 25 днів тому

      I usually fast forward through ads like that; however, that clever presentation made me much less likely to skip ahead.

  • @pmbrig
    @pmbrig 25 днів тому +50

    Punctuation matters:
    No, no more tequila, thanks.
    No, no! More tequila! Thanks!

    • @martinstephenson2226
      @martinstephenson2226 25 днів тому +10

      Shall we eat, grandma vs Shall we eat grandma!

    • @zzzaphod8507
      @zzzaphod8507 25 днів тому +9

      Barbershop sign:
      What do you think? I'll shave you for nothing and give you a drink!
      What?! Do you think I'll shave you for nothing and give you a drink?
      What do you think I'll shave? You, for nothing, and give you a drink?!

    • @SomebodyHere-cm8dj
      @SomebodyHere-cm8dj 25 днів тому +12

      A panda eats, shoots and leaves.
      vs
      A panda eats shoots and leaves.

    • @michaelturner2806
      @michaelturner2806 25 днів тому +5

      The panda eats shoots and leaves. 🎍 🌿
      The panda eats 🍜, shoots🔫, and leaves 🚪💨.

    • @spiralpython1989
      @spiralpython1989 24 дні тому +4

      What’s that on the road ahead? cf What’s that on the road? A head?

  • @szemenyeianita
    @szemenyeianita День тому +1

    Thoroughly enthralling subject matter, and even more thoroughly enjoyable presentation! Thanks a lot, Rob!

  • @user-lk3ws1qp5l
    @user-lk3ws1qp5l 23 дні тому +3

    Rob, your posts get better with every episode.
    This one was just superb, and SO well researched. Thank you!

  • @naginiriddle7091
    @naginiriddle7091 25 днів тому +7

    I'd like to point out that a semi-colon is the same as ", and" and not necessarily a period. You can definitely replace it with a period, BUT you can't replace a period with a semi-colon. Semi-colons are meant to join together two similar ideas that are expressed in independent clauses, whereas a period just separates independent clauses.

  • @Vim-Wolf
    @Vim-Wolf 25 днів тому +12

    I love the interrobang, and I’m trying to re-introduce it by using it on a regular basis.

    • @DanTheisen
      @DanTheisen 25 днів тому +3

      Yes!! It should’ve been in the title.

    • @zzzaphod8507
      @zzzaphod8507 25 днів тому

      @@DanTheisen Why‽

    • @ZeeHatley
      @ZeeHatley 25 днів тому +3

      @@zzzaphod8507because the title has it broken down to ?! instead of combined ‽

  • @ulrike9978
    @ulrike9978 25 днів тому +40

    The "John his horse" bit really made me grin, because this is absolutely how you denote posession in Bavarian, to the chagrin of high german speakers. Dative form of the name/noun+his/her/its/heir+subject. So: dem Schorsch sei(n) Huat = Georgs Hut = George´s hat

    • @Karen-ul9hd
      @Karen-ul9hd 24 дні тому +10

      Also in (what is considered not-so-grammatical) Dutch.

    • @anniehelman3516
      @anniehelman3516 24 дні тому +7

      Auf Schwäbisch ebenso.

    • @ulrike9978
      @ulrike9978 24 дні тому +7

      @@anniehelman3516 Da haben die Dialekte halt doch Ähnlichkeiten:-)

    • @chzinch
      @chzinch 23 дні тому +4

      Swiss German as Well.

    • @gubsak55
      @gubsak55 23 дні тому +3

      My German colleagues from Saarland used something similar. 😊

  • @verslalchimie5824
    @verslalchimie5824 23 дні тому +1

    Like most people watching this, I have been using these for decades and it's so amazing to finally know why, and where they come from!

  • @midshipman8654
    @midshipman8654 9 днів тому

    you explained punctuation better then my teachers ever did.
    I remember always getting confused when to use a comma, semicolon, and period, but thinking of them as a short, medium, and full stop really clicks.

  • @dennisanderson3895
    @dennisanderson3895 25 днів тому +8

    Rob, I can only admit I am SO jealous of the depth and expanse of your knowledge! Never dull, always interesting and invigorating! TY!

  • @PhoenixClank
    @PhoenixClank 25 днів тому +17

    In chemistry class we had some very old documents that were typed on a typewriter. You could write subscripts, as in CO₂, by shifting the paper half a line and typing a regular 2, but that would take up too much space, so they had a different notation: CO[2].
    I suppose the same was done in mathematics as well, where a₂ denotes the 2nd element in the sequence a, and was written with typewriters as a[2].
    This is why in computer programming, square brackets are still used to this day to index into sequences. (The only difference being that a[2] refers to the third element of the list a, because programmers start counting at 0 whereas mathematicians start counting at 1.)

    • @CliffSedge-nu5fv
      @CliffSedge-nu5fv 25 днів тому +2

      I see in some modern typed mathematics a_2 or t_n, etc. to mean the same thing if your word processor doesn't have subscript capability.

    • @CliffSedge-nu5fv
      @CliffSedge-nu5fv 25 днів тому +2

      Mathematicians sometimes also start counting at zero - or at any other number, depending on the formula.

    • @richardhole8429
      @richardhole8429 25 днів тому +1

      Those numbering conventions vary among different programming languages. Using brackets instead of parentheses are also a modern adaption.

    • @PhoenixClank
      @PhoenixClank 25 днів тому +1

      @@CliffSedge-nu5fv I was mostly poking fun at Matlab, the only programming language I know that does start counting at 1 (though I'm sure there are plenty more).
      As for the a_2 notation, I don't know of any _programming_ languages that do this, but it is used for typesetting in TeX (and probably others?). If you want more subscripted characters you gotta use curly braces, as in a_{42} or a_{t_n}. (Also you might make the argument that TeX is a programming language after all.)

    • @MCLooyverse
      @MCLooyverse 24 дні тому

      @@PhoenixClank Julia and (arguably) Lua count from 1 as well.
      Lua is arguable because, as I recall, it does not have lists, only dictionaries. But it does allow you to omit keys from a dictionary literal, in which case it will assume 1, 2, 3, etc., rather than starting from 0. But, if you do something like `x = {0 = "a", "b", "c"}` then you get, effectively, a 0-indexed list. Of course, Lua's whole stdlib expects 1-indexed lists, because that's what its sugar defaults to.

  • @cybetica
    @cybetica 25 днів тому +8

    Hi Rob, in both web and app development, the ellipsis is used as a symbol on buttons for 'more' too - often seen at the top right of western frontend web implementations. However for stylistic reasons, the ellipsis was often rotated 90 degrees, becoming vertical, along with elongating the dots to horizontal bars. This in turn has given the ellipsis a new name in that form as the 'hamburger' character, denoting how the three bars now look to a user.

  • @gnothisauton2116
    @gnothisauton2116 24 дні тому +1

    That was probably the best sponsor lead-in and episode incorporation I’ve ever seen. Bravo, sir.

  • @nlo114
    @nlo114 24 дні тому +2

    In my grammar lessons at school, we were taught that the inverted comma was to be used to denote quotations. The double inverted commas were to denote speech, to be placed at the star and end of the phrase.

    • @davidemmott6225
      @davidemmott6225 17 днів тому

      I seem to remember being told it didn't matter which way round you did it, but if you opened the quotation with a single inverted comma and then included another quotation within the quoted passage, you used double. Or vice versa.

  • @clarkoncomputers
    @clarkoncomputers 25 днів тому +11

    Rob, you're the master of the ad segues. I'm impressed, even watched the whole ad! (hehe)

  • @stischer47
    @stischer47 25 днів тому +7

    Coming out of American computer science - ( ) parentheses, [ ] brackets, { } braces. As for the apostrophe for possession, I was always taught it came from Old Anglo-Saxon where -es denoted possession (similar to German today). However, as English began to prefer -s for plurals, the -es for possession became -'s with the apostrophe indicating the possessive 'e' had been dropped.

  • @tthaas
    @tthaas 25 днів тому +5

    You blew my mind at 1:03. I knew about the lack of spaces in Greek and Roman (and even early post-Roman) writing, but never realized that people didn't just read silently until so late!

    • @KarlEchtermeyer
      @KarlEchtermeyer 23 дні тому +4

      I can’t recall the citation, but there are records of people finding those who read silently to be suspicious and mysterious.

  • @BrendelC
    @BrendelC 2 дні тому

    i noticed though that the rising intonation for questions doesn't really happen for yes/no questions in british english. it actually drops at the end of the sentence. like, if someone asks "do you want them?" the rise still does occur but only until want and "them" gets a lower tone

  • @araelthewise
    @araelthewise 22 дні тому +1

    The thing I love the most about your videos is how you explain things I may never asked myself before ,BUT, Now I need to know all about it

  • @richarddaugherty8583
    @richarddaugherty8583 25 днів тому +37

    Thanks Rob! Retired developer here. I loved this both for the English usage, history, and programming language syntax! We pronounce '!' as Bang, and in C# and Javascript or most languages that use the C syntax, a line of code ends with a semicolon. It can run on for multiple screen lines but won't compile without that semi. Quotations have a couple of different usages. Single quotes delimit a literal string such as 'Rob' whereas double quotes can contain variables as well as literals. An easy way to trip up! All of the brackets are used as well and have particular use cases for each.
    I'm sorry to point out that you missed an opportunity! When you introduced the period and used a sound effect, my brain immediately jumped to Victor Borges "Verbal Punctuation" comedy routine. If you haven't seen that you *must* look that up! I think you might bust a gut as we say here in the USA! What's even funnier is that he did these routines with a straight face. I do so love free association!

    • @rhaedas9085
      @rhaedas9085 25 днів тому +1

      I think any kid brought up on the older Sesame Street episodes would have thought the same about the sound effects of punctuation.

    • @nicholasvinen
      @nicholasvinen 24 дні тому +3

      Hash bang slash bin slash bash!

    • @Starlight_Hellfire
      @Starlight_Hellfire 24 дні тому +7

      I pronounce “!” as “not”

    • @richarddaugherty8583
      @richarddaugherty8583 24 дні тому +1

      @@Starlight_Hellfire Good one! I totally forgot about negation! Lot's of places to use a bang! :)

    • @richarddaugherty8583
      @richarddaugherty8583 24 дні тому +1

      @@nicholasvinen Hooray for Bash scripting! I dumped Windows and now use Linux Mint for my main computer. I have not quite a score of Raspberry Pi's but I'm getting there! One is a media server with 15 TB of media files!

  • @dubsar
    @dubsar 25 днів тому +6

    Your channel is just the best I know in UA-cam. You deserve more recognition.

  • @freddoflintstono9321
    @freddoflintstono9321 25 днів тому +7

    The man has a point . Joking aside, that was brilliant, thank you.

  • @AkiSan0
    @AkiSan0 18 днів тому

    i use the quotation marks as follows:
    >< to mark something >>important!

  • @65Tedybear
    @65Tedybear 22 дні тому +1

    About the Genitiv with 'his'. I grew up in the 60th and 70th in Northrhine-Westphalia in Germany. In the spoken German (albeit not in the more formal written German) I have perpetually heard phrases like 'Peter sein Rad' or 'Susi ihre Puppe' (Peter his bicycle / Susi her doll). I think, it was especially common in the rhine area around Cologne and Düsseldorf.
    Very interesting and educational video, not only for english people, but also for me as German. Thank you very much.

  • @eliavrad2845
    @eliavrad2845 25 днів тому +11

    9:30 That really caught me off-guard; Well played.

  • @CardboardBots
    @CardboardBots 25 днів тому +5

    This channel is so worthwhile.

  • @kimvibk9242
    @kimvibk9242 25 днів тому +9

    @6:42 - As a Dane I am pleased to see that you are using Victor Borges' system of Phonetic Punctuation!
    Look it up if you want a good laugh.

    • @Brunoburningbright
      @Brunoburningbright 25 днів тому +1

      Victor Borge was an absolute delight.

    • @AnotherCraig
      @AnotherCraig 21 день тому

      This video was great on its own merits, but it was all the better for reminding me of that classic bit 😆

  • @simonjelley
    @simonjelley Годину тому

    I was always told the possessive apostrophe replaced an e before the s used on words ending in a consonant, rather than the ‘his’ explanation. This does fit better with examples I’ve seen, and work for possessives that are not with singular male ownership.

  • @Boxygirl96
    @Boxygirl96 21 день тому

    11:57 in my experience when they are ‘alone’ they imply a loose quotation that may have had some paraphrasing or inaccuracy involved whereas if they come in “pairs” they imply a hard quote which is accurate to the original source material

  • @K.F-R
    @K.F-R 25 днів тому +14

    I see your purposefully ambiguous wordplay, and I approve. I always thought the old colon was the bottom one. Can't think why.

    • @tulliusexmisc2191
      @tulliusexmisc2191 18 днів тому +1

      Strictly speaking, if you start at the bottom you need to go up to find the colon.

  • @cloppj2
    @cloppj2 25 днів тому +60

    11:37 The Italian writer Ugo Ojetti also hated the exclamation mark, and left an unforgettable invective in one of his writings a hundred years ago:
    "I hate the exclamation mark, this great plume on such a small head, this sword of Damocles hanging over a flea, this great spit for a sparrow, this pole to impale common sense, this toothpick for the amusement of empty mouths, this cobbler's awl, this morphine addict's syringe, this rod of blasphemy, this dagger of hyperbole, this halberd of rhetoric. When, as is the custom in our shaky times, I see two or three of them in a row at the end of a sentence, looking like the sticks on the back of a plucked goose, I close the book because I feel it is a lie. Now there are also those who couple it with the question mark, which seems to see Harlequin leaning on Punchinello. I hate this romantic little black tear so much when I see it dripping on the poor white page, that I imagine I discover in it either the cause or the effect, certainly the clear symbol of all the evils of our letters, arts and customs. And if I could make laws, I would banish the exclamation mark from calligraphy, from typographies, from typewriters, from the Morse alphabet, in the hope that Italians would forget about it when they no longer see it, even when they speak and think, and would gradually expel from their blood this sharp microbe, which, where it arrives, causes brains and reason to rot, stupefies adults, blinds the visionaries, stupefies the wise, and makes saints go mad."

    • @riverAmazonNZ
      @riverAmazonNZ 25 днів тому +5

      Ugo needs to get a grip!

    • @s-x5373
      @s-x5373 25 днів тому

      based

    • @michellebyrom6551
      @michellebyrom6551 25 днів тому +3

      Clearly an Italian, being so dramatic about it. An Englishman would merely intimate that he didn't much like the device. A French man would dismiss it as unimportant and a German would ask "What's the point of this?" with a straight face.

    • @johnterrencemiles
      @johnterrencemiles 24 дні тому +3

      I believe his hyperbolic sentence itself should end in a exclamation mark.

    • @SimplePhysics00
      @SimplePhysics00 24 дні тому +2

      Imagine wasting so much energy and hate on a simple symbol that helps others convey information!

  • @matthewhewitson80
    @matthewhewitson80 25 днів тому +5

    Possibly the best segue into an Ad read I have seen in some time!

  • @PaulWatson-x3w
    @PaulWatson-x3w 15 днів тому

    He's so good at this. It's such a joy to watch. With a bit of Alan Partridge too.

  • @eloise5060
    @eloise5060 6 днів тому

    The interrobang is my favourite punctuation mark. I honestly have use for it so often.

  • @JeevasJerico13
    @JeevasJerico13 25 днів тому +7

    10:22 I got sent in a different dimension

  • @onliwankannoli
    @onliwankannoli 25 днів тому +5

    How about the direction of writing? Left to right, right to left, top to bottom? Or, as the ancient Greeks, alternating from right to left and left to right, known as βουστροφηδόν - an ox-turn.

    • @stephena1196
      @stephena1196 25 днів тому

      I was told, when little, writing from left to right and top to bottom was because, when writing in ink ones hand wouldn't smudge the writing.

    • @onliwankannoli
      @onliwankannoli 25 днів тому

      @@stephena1196 That’s true, when writing in ink. I suppose it wasn’t a factor when writing involved a chisel.

    • @zzzaphod8507
      @zzzaphod8507 25 днів тому

      @@stephena1196 If you're assuming everyone is right-handed?

  • @wylizzler
    @wylizzler 25 днів тому +12

    Always happy for the next RobWords ❤

  • @matthewwasser5621
    @matthewwasser5621 18 днів тому

    I like to read to myself aloud. Aloud enough to hear myself but also not to bother other people, if I'm around other people. Sometimes I find it hard to know which punctuation to use. I am often confused about the written language, that's why I like your channel.

  • @mark_a_schaefer
    @mark_a_schaefer 24 дні тому +1

    The word for "reading" in a number of languages is the same as "reciting." This reminds me of a story I remember reading about a Christian saint (can't remember which one) who said that he'd had laryngitis and couldn't read for a couple of days. There was another one-Francis? Anselm?-who was caught reading silently and his colleagues thought there was something wrong with him.

  • @rmdodsonbills
    @rmdodsonbills 25 днів тому +7

    The apostrophe may have started life for a dumb reason, but there is a good reason to have it! Simply adding an S to the end is also how we pretty frequently do plurals, so having an apostrophe helps clarify, especially when the noun that is owning something is itself plural. For example, if I were to just say "my friends cars" you can't be sure whether I have multiple friends or just one friend with multiple cars.

    • @WaterShowsProd
      @WaterShowsProd 25 днів тому +1

      Except, today you're more likely to see apostrophes misused to denote plurals. Poor apostrophe... For some reason people have forgotten how to use it, and it seems like that's always been the case. :(

    • @amicaaranearum
      @amicaaranearum 24 дні тому +1

      @@WaterShowsProd Everyone knows that the apostrophe means “here comes an ‘s’”.

    • @WaterShowsProd
      @WaterShowsProd 24 дні тому

      @@amicaaranearum I've speculated that people a hundred years from now will wonder why we used to write S without that little stroke in the upper-left-hand corner.

    • @rmdodsonbills
      @rmdodsonbills 24 дні тому

      @@WaterShowsProd Well, it isn't necessarily about forgetting how to use it. I certainly catch myself inserting an apostrophe even though I'm writing a plural. (I *hope* I catch them all right away) There was a time when I was taught to use an apostrophe to make a plural in certain circumstances (like when you are talking about a family "The Dodson's" or specifying multiple copies of a single letter "p's and q's") I do like the more consistent rules I've seen more recently ("Ps and Qs" "The Dodsons"). In my experience, I've seen apostrophes used correctly more often than not.

  • @alexgregory5583
    @alexgregory5583 25 днів тому +57

    Looks harder than a semi...

    • @parahandy2000
      @parahandy2000 25 днів тому

      Yeah that was clever…

    • @joelinherts
      @joelinherts 25 днів тому +8

      There should be a punctuation mark to indicate a double entendre

    • @SteveEngledow
      @SteveEngledow 23 дні тому +1

      Very quick cut after that 😂

  • @buckturgidson1448
    @buckturgidson1448 25 днів тому +12

    “it just looks harder than a semi.”
    You can tell Rob has been spending lots of time talking with Jess.

    • @andrewvirtue5048
      @andrewvirtue5048 23 дні тому

      Who?

    • @buckturgidson1448
      @buckturgidson1448 23 дні тому +1

      @@andrewvirtue5048 Jess Zafarris, Rob’s co-host on Words Unravelled. She often mentions words that are somewhat risqué, causing Rob to blush and get a little flummoxed.

  • @sunzageorge
    @sunzageorge 13 годин тому

    The idea that no one read silently until the 10th century is astounding to me.
    Although as I wrote this, the idea that not many people knew HOW to read until even much later than that crossed my mind. Crazy to imagine...though I guess knowledge is the enemy of oppression (from Genesis to today's stricter regimes). 🤯
    Thanks Rob!

  • @urinstein1864
    @urinstein1864 15 днів тому

    It's great to see, how much your video craft has improved from a couple years ago. Not to say it was ever bad, but your scripting, editing and presentation have become quite delightful. Great video.

  • @MrBradleykeith
    @MrBradleykeith 25 днів тому +45

    The cat's tail as the question mark, well we know what the dot represents, as it walks away from us after posing the question!

    • @fgriffintx
      @fgriffintx 25 днів тому

      Kind of like the cats meow, but different 😮

  • @annwagner5779
    @annwagner5779 25 днів тому +16

    I had no idea British and Americans pronounced colon so differently. How often, after all, do I hear colons discussed in videos or tv shows? Victoria Borge would have had a field day with this video - pronouncing all the punctuation. I think his phonetic punctuation is one of the funniest routines ever.

    • @kimvibk9242
      @kimvibk9242 25 днів тому +4

      Another one who remembers Victor Borge! Greetings from Denmark!

    • @Brunoburningbright
      @Brunoburningbright 25 днів тому +4

      Victor Borge was a delight: "AnyTwo for Eleven is?"

    • @Brunoburningbright
      @Brunoburningbright 25 днів тому +3

      The computer just refuses to understand the subtle wit of Mr. Borge. Let me try again; "Any2 for 11iss?'

    • @lizj5740
      @lizj5740 24 дні тому +2

      @@Brunoburningbright Which reminds me of a personalised license plate I saw: 10SNE1. Took me a while, but I finally got it.

  • @talideon
    @talideon 25 днів тому +7

    Dutch has an extra use of the apostrophe. If a noun ends in a vowel, you'll often put an apostrophe before the "s" (collega→collega's) when pluralising it so the vowel doesn't end up being read as short.

    • @CliffSedge-nu5fv
      @CliffSedge-nu5fv 25 днів тому +3

      Oh no, is that why I see so much English writing incorrectly using apostrophes to pluralize words? Some sort of Dutch infection?

    • @grizwoldphantasia5005
      @grizwoldphantasia5005 25 днів тому +1

      English sometimes does the same when transliterating foreign words to make sure both vowels are pronounced separately. Sometimes "ö" is used, as in coöperation.

    • @lizj5740
      @lizj5740 24 дні тому

      @@CliffSedge-nu5fv I wouldn't think you could blame the grocer's apostrophe on the Dutch; most grocers (in Australia, at least) are Italian or Greek. ;-)

    • @bonnie115
      @bonnie115 24 дні тому

      @@grizwoldphantasia5005 I've frequently seen ö used in Nöel, but never in cooperation (until you used it).

    • @grizwoldphantasia5005
      @grizwoldphantasia5005 24 дні тому +1

      @@bonnie115 it shows up mostly in old books, but I'm old enough to have accumulated some of them :-)

  • @VincentVanJoYT
    @VincentVanJoYT 24 дні тому +2

    12:01 only less than a year ago i started to see some quotation marks on the ground

  • @scottgray4623
    @scottgray4623 8 днів тому

    I really liked the text example where you had a conversation with your cat, it's good to know I'm not the only one that does this.

  • @t.kersten7695
    @t.kersten7695 25 днів тому +8

    why in the world has Rob to be so funny, entertaining and educative at the same time? now i have another great channel in my subscription-list but after all the previous videos i just had no further excuse for resisting any longer. and yet another english speaking YT-channel on my list which cements the ratio between english and german speaking channels in my list around 9 to 1.

  • @frogandspanner
    @frogandspanner 25 днів тому +22

    11:50 13:32 At primary school in the '50s we called them _inverted commas_ , and you will note I have not used them as I was not directly quoting.
    That term seems to have disappeared, along with much of my memory.

    • @kcgunesq
      @kcgunesq 25 днів тому +1

      I suspect that in part, it was simply because the comma had already been introduced and they could build off of that while reminding you that you needed to do them differently. Had that teacher been speaking to another adult, I question whether they would have described them as such.

    • @PhoenixClank
      @PhoenixClank 25 днів тому +2

      In Germany we (rarely) call the apostrophe a _high comma_ ( _Hochkomma_ ).
      Also I hate that UA-cam’s markdown must be surrounded by whitespace.

    • @adriancarlton-oatley9736
      @adriancarlton-oatley9736 25 днів тому

      I think I was taught (round about the same era) that they were quotation marks when they were round actual speech and inverted commas when they were round a noun or noun phrase e.g. "It's called an 'apostrophe'."

    • @CliffSedge-nu5fv
      @CliffSedge-nu5fv 25 днів тому

      I only hear _inverted commas_ from British speakers. Americans always say _quotation marks,_ or just _quotes_ for short.

    • @CliffSedge-nu5fv
      @CliffSedge-nu5fv 25 днів тому +1

      The virgule / backslash is still used in poetry to end a line of verse that is not necessarily the end of a sentence.

  • @WDCallahan
    @WDCallahan 25 днів тому +5

    Here's what I've always known these as:
    ( ) Parentheses
    { } Curly braces, or simply braces
    [ ] Square brackets, or simply brackets
    < > Angle brackets
    ' ' single quotes
    " " Double quotes
    - hyphen, or dash
    - stretch

    • @BetaDude40
      @BetaDude40 25 днів тому +1

      ~ Tilde
      ` Tick or Backtick (or "That weird symbol next to the squiggly/tilde" since rarely anyone uses it or has a name for it)
      / Slash or Forward Slash
      \ Backslash or Escape Character (for use in programming, like
      for a newline)
      | Pipe or "Or Symbol" (again, programming)
      & Ampersand or "And Symbol"
      @ At Symbol
      # Depends on context. Usually I call it a "hash" or "hashtag symbol" in most cases. Sometimes a "sharp" or a "pound sign"
      % Believe it or not, again because programming, I call this a "mod" or "modulus" more often than a percent sign
      ^ Carot
      * Asterisk, Times/Multiply, or Pointer symbol
      It's very interesting to me how computers have completely changed how we read and interpret punctuation

    • @CliffSedge-nu5fv
      @CliffSedge-nu5fv 25 днів тому

      I call the - hyphen a short dash and -- a long dash.

    • @cornbeverly
      @cornbeverly 25 днів тому +3

      I'm personally a fan of
      - en dash
      - em dash
      〜 wave dash
      Never heard of "stretch" before.

    • @cornbeverly
      @cornbeverly 25 днів тому

      ​@@BetaDude40 You don't call ` grave?
      Also dropping a mention for |'s alter ego ¦, which I'm told is called "broken bar".

    • @stickinthemud23
      @stickinthemud23 25 днів тому

      It’s not just you. It’s how EVERYONE who knows what they’re talking about refers to them.

  • @billclockwell
    @billclockwell 18 днів тому

    I finally have an answer to the question "why is "it's" a contraction and "its" is a possessive, when you put apostrophe S at the end to denote possession typically

  • @ardentommcclure4732
    @ardentommcclure4732 25 днів тому +5

    Two decades ago I solved a printing problem that the Thai language does not put spaces between words but rather uses spaces as commas and periods, indicating a pause in the flow of words. But that doesn’t work well in printed or on line. After several months of part-time research I discovered a simple algorithm that divides between words at the end of the line. It actually inserts a code marker between each word so the computer knows where to spit the sentence or phrase. Thai is a monosyllabic language like Chinese, but written in an alphabet from India. (Courtesy of Buddhism). I also learned during this that Thai is now beginning to borrow question marks and quotation marks as useful borrowings from the west.

  • @Treinbouwer
    @Treinbouwer 25 днів тому +5

    17:27 In Dutch it still is just an s added to a word and the ' is only used to mark something is left out. In this case it marks an extra letter needed for pronunciasion or gramar not being written.
    Georges=george+posessive s
    Auto's=auto (car) +plural s. The ' is an extra o needed for pronunciasion (autoos, but you do not write that and note that not all plurals end in an s)
    Suus'=suus (a name)+' for the posessive s that is not needed pronunciasion wise, but should be present gramar wise.
    's In itselve means des, the genitive masculin and nuter singular of the definite article, usually -but not exclusively- used in stoned forms.
    's Avonds (in the evening)

  • @Kenyanon
    @Kenyanon 25 днів тому +9

    >be me
    >be librarian in ancient greece

    • @beans8165
      @beans8165 25 днів тому +4

      >pleiades why is the librarian talking to himself

    • @yablock7346
      @yablock7346 25 днів тому +1

      >piss on da moon⸮

  • @parisdim8378
    @parisdim8378 20 днів тому

    Never stop making videos!!!! Great work, greetings from Greece.

  • @stuff3508
    @stuff3508 19 днів тому

    Always amazing. How can someone be so excited about words and punctuation. Always entertaining. Good job! Keep it up!

  • @bernardobuffa2391
    @bernardobuffa2391 25 днів тому +5

    6:55 nice try.... right arrow key to the rescue!

  • @stephena1196
    @stephena1196 25 днів тому +4

    07:40 be careful Rob: that spoon nearly had your eye out.

  • @juliuscaesar5197
    @juliuscaesar5197 25 днів тому +24

    In an alternate universe a dictionary has a channel about humans and anthropology. It's called WordRobs

  • @katelights
    @katelights 24 дні тому +1

    Dots as spaces survive in one unusual place - in Microsoft Word when you turn on the setting to show formatting marks.

  • @GWsavedMYlife
    @GWsavedMYlife 21 день тому

    16:57 a smooth way to include this reminder. I usually don't like it when UA-camrs overuse this command. If I like the contents of a channel I naturally subscibe without being pressed. I've subscribed here right after finding the channel. Very well done and informative, thanks.