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  • Dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun. Hi. James from engVid. We always do very serious lessons.

  • Well, kind of serious lessons, in my case, but usually, you know, we stick with the grammar,

  • the idioms, vocabulary, and whatnot, and every once in a while, it's just kind of fun to

  • find out where words are. There's nothing wrong with learning for learning sake. In

  • fact, when you learn that way and you're having fun, you're probably going to want to learn

  • more. Okay? Even myself, I've taught English for at least 10 years. Probably longer; gosh

  • knows. Every once in a while I'm fascinated when I learn the history of something that

  • I didn't know existed or, you know, why we use this instead of that, or there used to

  • be something else. It's fascinating.

  • So today, we're going to have a bit of a fun lesson where you're going to learn about English

  • words. You're still going to learn how to use them, but we're going to look at words

  • that actually come from you, the viewing audience. You guys always watch us. Now we're going

  • to return the favour and tell you about words that come from your countries, your languages

  • that we brought. Okay? So these are words from around the world, brought to you by Mr.

  • E. And you can see our globe is here. And we're going to take a first look at our visual

  • words, and then we're going to do a few others and give you some definitions. You ready?

  • Let's do the first one.

  • What could be more American in the world than the hamburger? There's McDonald's hamburgers,

  • Big Boy burgers, just burgers. Right? The hamburger and the hot dog are American as

  • apple pie. But what if I told you the hamburger is not American? Right now there are about

  • a million Americans having heart attacks, like: "Don't take that away from us. That's

  • American like apple pie." Like an American German apple pie? [Laughs] You'll see, in

  • the country Germany there is a place called Hamburg, and the hamburger wasn't served on

  • a bun. That, I have to give to the Americans, they put it on a bun. Because you know they're

  • lazy... I didn't say that, guys, but they don't want to use knife and fork, so they

  • use a bun. In Hamburg, they had the patty, the beef patty, and they would eat it that

  • way. It took an American to put some bread underneath and bread on top, and have that

  • patty that way. But it... Hamburger was originally from Hamburg and it was just a meat patty.

  • Didn't know that, did you? That's right, Americans, I've got more. [Laughs]

  • What's next? Popular instrument. If you love jazz [makes music noise] that's not even a

  • saxophone; I don't know how to play. Go watch The Simpsons and watch Lisa Simpson, she plays

  • the saxophone. I had a teacher named David Mott, great guy, he also played the sax. Professional

  • jazz player. Sexy instrument. Now, the saxophone, it sounds very French, no? The French people

  • right now are going: "Of course, it's magnifique. It's ours. It is a phone. It is a sax." I've

  • got news for you: bloody Germans... Well, not Germans. This guy's... This time the guy's

  • from Belgium. His name was Adolphe Sax. Okay? "Adolphe" is spelt "ph", so you've got your

  • "ph" here. "Saxophone", it was his musical scene. He's from Belgium. Belgium? Except

  • from The Muscles from Brussels, Jean-Claude Van Damme, nothing comes from Belgium. And

  • chocolates. But they also made the saxophone. Cool? There you go.

  • I got one more for you. Canadian, eh? Finally, the Canadians are like: "We're on the map,

  • dude." News for you: "Machiavellian", which means devil-like. Right? You think it's Canadian?

  • Maple syrup, hosers, hockey? No. Italiano. The Italians invented this. This guy's name

  • was Nicolli-, Machiavelli. He wrote book 500 years ago, and this book was so bad the church

  • didn't like it, and they called it devil and Machiavellian when a person has a bad idea.

  • Yeah, I know, it's a bad Italian accent, but you get the point. We take a lot of your words,

  • we use it in our language, and you come and say: "English is so difficult." I go: "Yeah,

  • it is, because they're your words." So we've done these ones. And what we're going to do

  • now is I'm going to... You know, I'm going to do that magical disappear thing and I'm

  • going to introduce you to some other words that have been brought into English in our

  • everyday lexicon or dictionary that we use regularly, and give you some expressions that

  • we might use them with. You ready? Let's go on our world tour.

  • And we're back. So, we started with those first three words, if you remember. We talked

  • about the saxophone, the hamburger, and Machiavellian, and we noticed that words that seem to be

  • English actually can come from different parts of the world. We're going to look at a couple

  • other words now or a few that come from not just different places, but different times

  • in history. You ready? Let's go to the board.

  • All right, so: "spartan". Some of you watched the movie The 300. "This is Sparta!" which

  • this is a... This was a Greek city state, about 2,000 odd years ago. All right? "Spartan"

  • means severely simple. It means... It's not just simple. Simple is nice. Water is simple.

  • The severely simple. It's hard to describe. It means very strongly simple, but hard, harsh.

  • "Harsh" means strong, but in a negative way. So they kept things very, very simple. Okay?

  • So when somebody says: "This is a spartan existence", it means there's nothing much.

  • Maybe you have one chair, one bed, one pair of pants, one shirt, and that's all you have.

  • A spartan diet would be very simple. Maybe you would have four vegetables, two fruits,

  • and two pieces of meat. Nothing else. No cake. No, put the Fanta down. No Fanta. None of

  • that. You're living a spartan existence. [Whistles] Tough. Okay?

  • We use these as... Some expressions you might say: "A spartan diet", I gave you an example

  • of that. No cake, sugars, and that. Just simple, basic foods. You kill it, you eat it. What

  • I kill I keep. That's it. That's spartan, son. "A spartan existence", you know that

  • cellphone, "bringity, bringity, bring"? No cellphone, no internet, no TV. That's right.

  • And your game box, good bye. Spartan existence: chair with no couch. Woo, couch is gone too,

  • baby. You're lucky you get to sit down. You got a bed and you got a chair. You go to work,

  • you come back, you go to bed, you get up and you do it again. Nothing else. Oh, and working

  • out like Arnold. Spartan existence. Maybe a book, if you're lucky. That's a privilege.

  • [Laughs]

  • And a "spartan upbringing". Some parents are very strict. They will say something like:

  • "No television. Only on the weekends. No candy, except, you know, three times a year. You

  • know, one present a year. You're going to have a lot of discipline." That's a spartan

  • upbringing, which means all of the things that many children enjoy; playing out and

  • doing... You don't. You would be working, sleeping, going to school, being strong, eating

  • basic foods. No... Not a lot of fun. Disney World, good bye. All right? So, when people

  • talk about spartan, it's very simple, very basic, and it can be harsh for many people.

  • Very strong.

  • Let's talk about "bedlam". "Bedlam" means chaos. "Chaos" means it's out of control,

  • it's crazy. Everything's going over; noise, people running, fires, whatnot. It's total

  • bedlam. No control. No leadership. Funny, because "bedlam" comes from a famous English

  • mental hospital. They were crazy. Absolutely not. They were crazy house, and they were

  • so crazy, people would refer to a situation being bedlam, and they go: "Oh my god, is

  • it that crazy? This is bad. We have to fix it." They tore down the hospital, but that's

  • from a long time ago, and that's where all the famous mental people went. All right?

  • So when you talk about bedlam, you talk about chaos. Things are just nuts, out of control.

  • "Chauvinist", this is funny. This comes from a guy from France who loved Napoleon so much,

  • and thought Napoleon was the best, the French people were the best. I know there's some

  • French people right now watching, going: "We are the best." You're not. Nicolas Chauvin

  • thought they were fantastic, so the name became used for anybody who thinks something is superior

  • to other things. It could be men superior to women, one religion superior to another

  • one. If you think your country is superior to another, you're a chauvinist. A person

  • who greatly believes in the superior or the greatness of your people or your group to

  • others. All right?

  • "Boycott", I like this. Can you imagine this? A long, long time ago, laddy, in Ireland,

  • there was a guy who had... He was a landlord. We have a video out about property and ownership,

  • go check it out, and it's got "landlord", and it explains it. It's a person who own

  • lands, and people live there, and they pay rent; monthly money to stay or food. Anyway,

  • this guy was so bad... His name was Boycott. He was so bad that the people in the town

  • socially isolated him. They wouldn't talk to him, because he was mean to the tenants.

  • Like maybe he wouldn't give them water to drink or he wouldn't let them have their food

  • there. He was so horrible, and he wasn't even living there. He was what we call "absentee

  • landlord". He didn't live there. He did nothing. These people isolated him socially. So when

  • you boycott something, you refuse to do... Deal with or deal business with somebody,

  • because you say: "You're so bad I don't want to have anything to do with you." Now, you

  • can't boycott a friend. I wish we could, but you can't boycott a friend. It's to boycott

  • someone that you do business with. So they will eventually lose money and hopefully change

  • their ways. All right? They do it for countries as well. They boycott them. All right?

  • Finally: "mentor". In English, we use it... People use it every day and think mentor is

  • somebody... And it's true. Is somebody who's loyal and they advise you. They're smart,

  • they're wise, and they advise you. They give you good advice to help you do well in your

  • career. Usually career or sports. Right? They help bring you up through the ranks. Help

  • you move up. But funny, this word is from Greece from thousands of years ago. There

  • was a poem. We call it a book, but it was a huge, a gigantic poem called The Odyssey,

  • and in this book, the hero was named Odysseus. Think of Batman, Spiderman, Wolverine, all

  • of those guys without the superpowers, without the super uniform. He was a guy. Okay? But

  • he went and travelled the world, and he was trying to get back home. And he went on...

  • That's what The Odyssey is called, travelling. He went on a big journey to get back home.

  • And he had a good friend, and his friend's name was... Guess what? Mentor. His friend's

  • name was Mentor, so you know, all the smart people in the world went: "Hmm. Mentor was

  • his good friend and he gave him good advice. Why don't we call everybody who gives good

  • advice and is loyal a mentor?" And thus, the word was born. Da-da. So we've gone from Greece,

  • France, Belgium, Greece again, London. We've... Well, we didn't come to Canada. I put Canadian,

  • but we never came back here. One day there'll be a word that will be here that's strictly

  • Canadian. That day's not today.

  • Anyway, once again, we have our little quiz, the mini quiz, because you're going to take

  • the bigger quiz after. Right? And we're going to see how well you learned your lesson today.

  • Are you ready?

  • "There was __________ in the streets when Japan beat Brazil in the world cup."

  • Think about it. Japan, I love you, your people are beautiful. [Kisses] You cannot beat Brazil.

  • If you beat Brazil in the world cup in the next couple of years, there would be what?

  • People would go crazy. They would lose their minds. Right? There would be

  • bedlam. Chaos.

  • Trust me, the Brazilians would go crazy first.

  • Then the rest of us, like: "Really? Oh that's so nice."

  • Okay, what about number two? Mr. E thinks that women are not as smart as

  • men. He is a __________ pig." How can he say that? How can he think men

  • are superior to women? Clearly, ladies, because I love you ladies, you know that's not true.

  • Right? Right. I think Mr. E is a what?

  • He's a chauvinist. But we would say here: "He is

  • a male chauvinist pig." Male indicates he is a man and he thinks men are better than

  • women. So a male chauvinist pig is what Mr. E is. I always liked that worm. We've been

  • together for years, man. Anyway.

  • Finally, number three on our quiz which I know you're going to know the answer to if

  • I give you two seconds. One, two, done. Your time's up. [Laughs]

  • "Her father was strict when she was a child. She had a __________."

  • What? So her childhood, she was getting up, upbringing. What kind of upbringing would

  • have a strict father, wouldn't let her have dollies? Well, she was a girl who played with

  • trucks, man. She didn't play around. She had a

  • spartan upbringing. Remember we talked about

  • that? When the father is strict and you have very few things. She had a spartan upbringing.

  • And that concludes our lesson. It wasn't spartan in any way. We gave you all of the frills

  • and we travelled the world. A small odyssey, you might say. And I digress. Anyway, listen,

  • it was a great lesson. Thank you for coming here once again. Love the fact you interact

  • with us. We love your comments. We do look at them. In fact, one of the lessons coming

  • up is on one of your comments.

  • But before we go there, I want you to go to a special place that's in my heart. Okay?

  • I'm a bit of a chauvinist on this because I do feel that engVid is really good. Forgive

  • me. But engVid, I just mentioned it. www, the three w's, right? Then eng as in English,

  • let me do it this way, vid as in video. Or I'll turn it around. Woops. I can't remember.

  • In England, don't look because I did it wrong. Okay? www.engvid.com, okay? Where you'll see

  • myself and a lot of other fantastic teachers who can teach you as much wonderful English

  • as you'd like. I hope you enjoyed the lesson to give you a little bit... Bring a little

  • bit of you to us, because we appreciate what you've done for our language.

  • Have a great day, and don't forget: go do the quiz and press "like". All right? Sign up. Bye.

Dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun. Hi. James from engVid. We always do very serious lessons.

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