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  • Hey Vsauce Michael here

  • In 1934 Webster's dictionary gave birth to a new word

  • by mistake their chemistry editor

  • Austin N Paterson submitted a simple entry D

  • or D abbreviation for density

  • nothing wrong with that but the entry was miss read

  • and 'dord' was added to the dictionary

  • 'dord' was an accidental word for thirteen years before the mistake was

  • discovered

  • and its wordship revoked. Let's have fun with words today

  • but first what's the deal with first?

  • or for that matter second? If you were in position three

  • your in third place. Position 5, fifth

  • position 197

  • 197 pretty simple

  • so why do positions 1&2 give us first and second

  • shouldn't they be oneth and twoth?

  • well maybe. But English loves

  • collateral adjectives. Adjectives derived from different groups than the nouns

  • they describe. There are plenty of derived adjectives don't get me wrong

  • a bunch of clouds

  • make the day cloudy, friends are friendly

  • poets are poetic things with a lot of smell to them are smelly

  • but the Moon is not Moonly

  • the Moon is lunar

  • collateral adjectives are everywhere

  • mouth stuff is oral. Bee's are apian

  • some nouns have both fathers can be

  • fatherly or paternal

  • and a setting filled with fog can be foggy or brumous

  • It's often said that no word

  • rhymes with orange. Is that true?

  • Well rhyming can be controversial because it often depends on pronunciation

  • accent and can be forced especially if you use multiple

  • words you can force orange to rhyme with door hinge

  • if you want but what we want is a perfect rhyme

  • a perfect rhyme is what occurs between two words

  • like tickle and pickle they are perfect rhymes because the final stressed

  • vowel sound and all the sounds afterwards are identical

  • identical doesn't rhyme with pickle because even though they both

  • end with 'ickle' identical has it stressed in the wrong place

  • we could rhyme them if we pronounced it not identical

  • but instead identical. With that in mind

  • orange does have perfect rhyme's they just happened to be extremely obscure

  • like blorenge a hill in Wale's

  • silver also has a perfect rhyme chilver a female lamb

  • think fact delineated even more words we often say don't have rhymes but

  • actually do. Point is orange does have

  • perfect rhymes and even if it didn't well

  • that wouldn't make it special. Sure monosyllabic words

  • tend to rhyme with other words it's believed there are only about 100 single syllable

  • words that have no rhyme

  • for instance wolf, sixth, depth and filmed

  • but considering words of all lengths

  • it's been calculated that most english words

  • don't rhyme with anything don't believe me

  • well leave a comment below the word comment

  • rhymes with nothing, nor does husband, sandwich

  • liquid, penguin, chimney, empty

  • and of course nothing rhymes with nothing

  • identical rhymes are even more perfect

  • than perfect rhymes but they become so identical at that point

  • it's a little obvious and not really appreciated

  • identical rhymes occur when the consonant sound before the final stressed vowel

  • between two words are also identical

  • sun and gun are perfect rhymes but gun

  • and begun are identical rhymes so are

  • offend and defend or homonyms like

  • son and sun you could call the people who watch over and monitor the police

  • the police police who watches over them well

  • the police police police of course you can string together

  • any number of police's and always create a sensible

  • though clunky title you can even use

  • the word police by itself to create a grammatical sentance it takes

  • eight of them police police police police police police police

  • police police here's what the sentence means police police

  • which police police police watch over police police

  • add any multiple of three more police to this stream

  • and you preserve the grammar the most that fit on Twitter

  • is 20 if you say police enough times it starts to sound like its not even a

  • real word

  • that is called jamais vu the reverse of deja vu

  • when something familiar all of a sudden feels new

  • and novel I've covered it before but let's be clear

  • if you don't practice obediency to the police

  • you may wind up in J L escape and you're an SKP

  • letters whose names said together some similar to words

  • are called Gramograms. You can't hear

  • a pterodactyl urinate because it's silent p

  • but every letter in the alphabet is silent sometimes

  • and some letters are used more frequently than other letters

  • in english words Scrabble provides more of those letters and people guess them more

  • often when playing hangman. Next time you play hangman you can take advantage of this

  • people will guess more letters incorrectly if you choose a short word

  • that has few different letters. John McLuhan

  • ran 15 million computer simulations of hangman

  • and he found that the most difficult word for people to guess

  • is jazz

  • phantonyms aren't ghostly undead words they're words that appear to mean one thing but

  • actually mean something completely different

  • enervate sounds like it means to fill with energy but it actually means to

  • drain of energy to weaken

  • Noisome appears to mean really noisy but it actually describes something that has an

  • extremely offensive smell

  • In 2005 the New Oxford American Dictionary published a new word

  • esquivalience

  • the said it meant the willful avoidance of one's official responsibilities

  • but it didn't they made it up

  • as a copyright trap if anyone copied their dictionary

  • the stealer wouldn't be able to explain how esquivalience wound up in their dictionary

  • without admitting that they had copied it. Map makers often insert fake

  • features for the same purposes Street and towns that only exist

  • to trap copiers that only exist on paper

  • paper Street & Paper Towns the author of The Trivia encyclopedia even placed a fake fact

  • in one of his books because he was certain

  • that the Trivial Pursuit board game was taking their questions

  • from his book sure enough later the board game included his fake fact

  • as a real question. Similarly the esquivalinece trap was used to catch

  • Dictionary.com

  • but here's the thing: authorities don't tend to respect copyright traps

  • built out of fake facts

  • facts cannot be copyrighted they belong to and can be used by

  • all of us. US federal courts have argued that

  • fake facts presented as real are not protected because if they were

  • no one could share real true information without fear

  • of sharing something protected by copyright: that said

  • stylistic decisions like how the facts are selected or arranged or articulated

  • can be copyrighted when the automobile association was caught mimicking

  • the stylistic features of ordnance survey's they were forced to pay up

  • twenty million pounds

  • you cannot own a fact

  • and you cannot own a lie you made up if everyone believes it

  • but you can own how you tell them

  • puns are great, and in 'The Pun Also Rises'

  • John Pollock relates a fantastic story. Puns can be traced

  • all the way back to be epic of Gilgamesh where people are warned

  • of an upcoming giant flood they are told that the skies will soon rain

  • kibtu and kukku words that mean

  • corn and the sound corn makes when falling on the ground

  • but in the story the words are actually puns

  • on words for misery and suffering

  • people who got the pun prepared and saved their own lives

  • but those who fail to recognize the pun perished in the flood

  • which means the very oldest pun on record

  • was literally corny. Is that ironic?

  • no. Irony is one of the most

  • debated figures of speech the oatmeal famously lamented that if anyone refers

  • to anything as being

  • ironic the hip thing to do right now is to call it out as being not ironic

  • situational irony is what we tend to mean when we say something is ironic

  • the oatmeal defines it as when something happens in a reversal of expectations occurs

  • dig.com's recent article on the subject uses an even stricter definition

  • saying situational irony is a direct result of an

  • action intended to produce the opposite effect

  • their example is really good if the elevators

  • at in elevator repair school are out of order

  • that's not really situational irony. Instead

  • what would be really ironic is that if the elevators were our border because the

  • experts at the school had done something to them

  • they believed would make them run forever and never be

  • out of order. Alanis Morissette wrote a song called

  • ironic whose lyrics contain situations but

  • famously no situational ironing

  • people love pointing this out.

  • A traffic jam when you're already late. Not situational irony

  • that's just a bummer or a sad coincidence. Patrick Sastles cleverly

  • rewrote the song's lyrics to contain situations that are actually

  • situationally ironic for example a traffic jam

  • when you're already late to receive an award from the municipal planning board

  • for reducing the city's automobile congestion

  • eighty percent, or a black fly in your chardonnay

  • poured to celebrate the successful fumigation of your recently purchased vineyard in southern France

  • now that's what I call situational irony

  • but regardless of what Alanis intended

  • a close reading of the song's lyrics reveals that irony

  • is occurring just not the situational kind it's hip to argue about

  • instead her song is all about dramatic irony

  • when someone is often hilariously

  • unaware of the significance of an event while other people are

  • take a look at the lyrics for ironic the situations she describes our never

  • explicitly labeled

  • ironic at the most they're simply stories and similes and metaphors for it

  • life

  • and she adds later life is also

  • ironic dramatically ironic these things sound like crudy scenarios but they

  • actually figure they actually make sense

  • ironic is not a list of examples of situational irony

  • instead it's a treatise on dramatic irony

  • the difference between what life knows we need

  • and what we need think we need

  • what's ironic isn't 10,000 spoons when all you need is at knife it's the fact that

  • as Alanis believes you have all of those spoons

  • because unbeknownst to you but known by life what you really need right now

  • is only spoons or the last thing you need right now is a knife

  • on the subject of overanalyzing pop songs

  • analysis of dog mitochondrial DNA has revealed that

  • all dogs may be traceable to a localized event

  • the species is believed to have resulted from the domestication of

  • wolves about 11,000 to 16,000 years ago

  • in what is now southwestern China

  • so baha men to answer your question it was the Mesolithic southwestern Chinese

  • who let the dogs out

  • and as always thanks for watching

Hey Vsauce Michael here

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