to be fair tubbo trained his speaking/reading so much this past 6 years, the progress is insane! I would bet he would beat dyslexia tests now just by how good he got!
Tubbo is a better English Teacher than the other teacher. It's so complicated for me to explain what is the difference between In and On😭I would say more than one explanation
English is weird Tallulah In the door frame experiment it makes perfect sense but in others it doesn't Because English time and time again decides not to follow it's own rules that it JUST WROTE😂
English is so incosistent ;-; my boyfriend explained it to me exactly like tubbo did and I understood. Tubbo is really smart he explains things verry well btw
@@jamiegenlix8613 a friend of mine (doesnt speak any english) told me that english with an american accent sounds exactly like smilish lmao idk about other accents tho
@@QueenBeeBee_art I mean, if you have amazing balance (which I don't) you can try, that's for sure lol. On the bike's case I see more as you literally sat on it, there's no way you can get in it so there's no confusion. Same with the motorcycle
How I think about it for vehicles is that if you can walk around inside the vehicle then you say "on" but if you can't then you say "in". For example, "on a bus" "on a boat" "on a train" "on a plane" "on a spaceship" but "in a car" and "in a carriage". Also, if you ride on top of something not inside of it you use "on" such as "on a horse" and "on a bike" same as being on top of a door frame like Tubbo says.
I never even realized how difficult English is to people that don’t speak it. I’ve always heard about how it’s a very hard language to learn but I’m now understand why, I always thought that that is basic grammar but it’s not for some people.
You know my native language is polish which is in one of hardest languages to learn and for me it was easy like we have 3 times past, present and future seams easy but no we have sonetimes more than 14 version of some verb like riding which using the right one was very simply but not for the not native speakers. I know english very well but still some grammar is sometimes hard for me like who normal have to create 16 times it is weird. Also some words is hard to said like I always have problem when I have to read "brought".
I never thought about the differences with private and public vehicles!! Maybe you could also think about it as being “on a bus trip” or “on a plane flight,” but you wouldn’t usually say “on a car trip” because private cars don’t have formal trips like that
I never actually thought about the in vs on thing It's always been kind of intuitive But yeah I guess if you're learning English as a second language it makes no sense
for stuff like this, its more of what people say most of the time so you just follow it so stuff like this is situational.. (as someone who speaks more english than my supposed native language which is Filipino)
My english teacher taught us that whether you're in or on a vehicle depends on how you board it. You're /on/ a boat, even if it has a roof and if it is a private vehicle- because you stand as you get in. Same for trains, busses, bikes, metro/subways, a horse, etc. But, you're /in/ a car, even if its a cabriolet (no roof) or a limousine (long ass fancy car), because you sit down to get in. same for an uber or taxi (because they're also cars), or the sidecar of a motorbike. The only exceptions I can think of right now are: /In/ the horse wagon when it has a roof, but /on/ if it doesn't, and /on/ a moped even though you sit down to ride it. Feel free to add more or correct me if I'm wrong, English is my second language too (Dutch being my first).
My trick usually just copy other people. If other say 'on a bus', 'in a house' then that's how I'm going to say it. If someone ask me to explain it I won't have any idea
2:25 There- is wanting to go “there” as a place, so “I want to go over there” (place) they’re- I think it’s “they are” that word is just shorten Their- people usually meant as multiple people, there are people that use “their” as their pronouns IS PROBABLYNOT 100% CORRECT but that’s what I learnt and how I use them!! Don’t come at me please
TBF the only reason English still exists is because we took words from other languages (not kidding) Eg; Banana (West African) Lemon (Arabic) Ketchup (Chinese) Karaoke (Japanese) Ballet (French) Wanderlust (German) Paparazzi (Italian) Penguin (Welsh + was originally a different animal entirely that went extinct about a century or longer ago) And then sometime as we went more modern with languages English decided it was going to have a rule that it doesn't even follow half the time. (I before e except after c)
Tubbo may be dyslexic, but he explained it better than my English teacher.
Ikr, like wth???
Frrr
Fr, that’s so funny, but also really cool
to be fair tubbo trained his speaking/reading so much this past 6 years, the progress is insane! I would bet he would beat dyslexia tests now just by how good he got!
Dyslexia isn't real, its just called not being able to read. Go to school. 😂
Tubbo is a better English Teacher than the other teacher. It's so complicated for me to explain what is the difference between In and On😭I would say more than one explanation
AWEEE SHE ASKED WILBUR THIS TOO 😭
edit: 100 likes ‼️
English is weird Tallulah
In the door frame experiment it makes perfect sense but in others it doesn't
Because English time and time again decides not to follow it's own rules that it JUST WROTE😂
Yeah sorry about that lol
English is so incosistent ;-; my boyfriend explained it to me exactly like tubbo did and I understood. Tubbo is really smart he explains things verry well btw
English isn’t my native language and this was actually really helpful
What does English sound like when someone speaks it to you? 🧐
@@jamiegenlix8613 a friend of mine (doesnt speak any english) told me that english with an american accent sounds exactly like smilish lmao idk about other accents tho
@@millae_ that’s a funny way to say it but true 😂
I always thought of it like this: if you can walk in it, use on. If you can't, use in
But can you walk on a bike though?
@@QueenBeeBee_art I mean, if you have amazing balance (which I don't) you can try, that's for sure lol. On the bike's case I see more as you literally sat on it, there's no way you can get in it so there's no confusion. Same with the motorcycle
How I think about it for vehicles is that if you can walk around inside the vehicle then you say "on" but if you can't then you say "in". For example, "on a bus" "on a boat" "on a train" "on a plane" "on a spaceship" but "in a car" and "in a carriage". Also, if you ride on top of something not inside of it you use "on" such as "on a horse" and "on a bike" same as being on top of a door frame like Tubbo says.
Lol tubbo is struggling
After 10 years studying English this finally makes sense.
dang your upload schedule is on point my notifications are filled with your videos💀
Why is Tallulah getting even more sassier every time I watch her? She use to not swear, now she does?!
Tubbo is way smarter than he thinks :)
He struggles in these areas, but he really does try his best!
I never even realized how difficult English is to people that don’t speak it. I’ve always heard about how it’s a very hard language to learn but I’m now understand why, I always thought that that is basic grammar but it’s not for some people.
Hahaa yes, but it's definetly a lot easier then my native language 😂. I am way better at english
You know my native language is polish which is in one of hardest languages to learn and for me it was easy like we have 3 times past, present and future seams easy but no we have sonetimes more than 14 version of some verb like riding which using the right one was very simply but not for the not native speakers. I know english very well but still some grammar is sometimes hard for me like who normal have to create 16 times it is weird. Also some words is hard to said like I always have problem when I have to read "brought".
I never thought about the differences with private and public vehicles!! Maybe you could also think about it as being “on a bus trip” or “on a plane flight,” but you wouldn’t usually say “on a car trip” because private cars don’t have formal trips like that
Tubbo is literally built different
First language English and I never thought about in and on before
I never actually thought about the in vs on thing
It's always been kind of intuitive
But yeah I guess if you're learning English as a second language it makes no sense
Aprendendo inglês com o tubbo
He actually explained it really well :0
In and on is just something english people know but cant explain
damn thats actually so helpful? wtfff
I never knew it was the reason ehy you say on a train when you are inside of it- (im Turkish btw)
TRUE
for stuff like this, its more of what people say most of the time so you just follow it so stuff like this is situational.. (as someone who speaks more english than my supposed native language which is Filipino)
My english teacher taught us that whether you're in or on a vehicle depends on how you board it. You're /on/ a boat, even if it has a roof and if it is a private vehicle- because you stand as you get in. Same for trains, busses, bikes, metro/subways, a horse, etc. But, you're /in/ a car, even if its a cabriolet (no roof) or a limousine (long ass fancy car), because you sit down to get in. same for an uber or taxi (because they're also cars), or the sidecar of a motorbike.
The only exceptions I can think of right now are: /In/ the horse wagon when it has a roof, but /on/ if it doesn't, and /on/ a moped even though you sit down to ride it. Feel free to add more or correct me if I'm wrong, English is my second language too (Dutch being my first).
My trick usually just copy other people. If other say 'on a bus', 'in a house' then that's how I'm going to say it.
If someone ask me to explain it I won't have any idea
Spanish/English bilingual here.
On = Encima de.
In = Adentro de.
Ambas traducen a “en”.
2:25 There- is wanting to go “there” as a place, so
“I want to go over there” (place)
they’re- I think it’s “they are” that word is just shorten
Their- people usually meant as multiple people, there are people that use “their” as their pronouns
IS PROBABLYNOT 100% CORRECT but that’s what I learnt and how I use them!!
Don’t come at me please
ok im a english teacher, if someone ask this i will explain like this
About the cars and trains, my English teacher explained it like that: if you can stand up and walk,its "on",if you can't you say "in" :0
I thought should didn't have an h so I've been spelling it like sould 😂
Tubbo actually teach me bruh
i think you're on a bus but in a car because on buses/trains/planes etc. you can walk around
which vod/stream is this from??
TBF the only reason English still exists is because we took words from other languages (not kidding)
Eg;
Banana (West African)
Lemon (Arabic)
Ketchup (Chinese)
Karaoke (Japanese)
Ballet (French)
Wanderlust (German)
Paparazzi (Italian)
Penguin (Welsh + was originally a different animal entirely that went extinct about a century or longer ago)
And then sometime as we went more modern with languages English decided it was going to have a rule that it doesn't even follow half the time. (I before e except after c)
Tallulah is mexican
First
How dare u tubbo is not this ,this he is a normal person 😑
Are people really confused by this? It's easy bro, english is so easy man
It’s not their native language
@@maevewashere_ not mine either, still easy
@@shory3172 idk I’m a native speak myself and I am really bad at it
@@maevewashere_ i'm bad at my native language too, but english is kinda easy
@@shory3172 🤷♀️