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Etymology and surprising origins of English words
Learn about etymology, the study of word origins and derivations in historical linguistics, and the influence of a Proto-Indoeuropean (PIE) language in the formation of English and other modern languages in Europe, Russia, and Asia. Highlighted is how etymologists have come up with a theoretical model of the Proto-Indoeuropean language; how Modern English was influenced by the Proto-Germanic and Latin languages, both descendants of PIE; and how English continues to borrow words from other languages.
TO CLARIFY THE ORIGIN OF "WAR"
PIE *wers- "to confuse, mix up" ► Frankish *werra ► Old North French "werre (Old French "guerre," meaning dispute, war) ► late Old English wyrre, werre "large-scale military conflict." Cognates suggest the original sense was "to bring into confusion." There's muc...
published: 28 Sep 2017
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Etymological Meaning
Video shows what etymological means. Of or relating to etymology.. Consistent with its etymological characteristics (in historical usage and/or the source language).. Etymological Meaning. How to pronounce, definition audio dictionary. How to say etymological. Powered by MaryTTS, Wiktionary
published: 18 Apr 2015
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Fruit: Surprisingly Connected Etymologies
Five fruit-related words with unexpected connections.
Thank you to our newest Patreon supporters, Guille Puerto, Ann Miller, Alex Katz, Dan Pugh, William C. Fox, and Lexitecture! To join them, check out our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/TheEndlessKnot
Endless Knot posters are on RedBubble: https://www.redbubble.com/people/EndlessKnot/shop?asc=u
Let us know if there are more video posters you want to see there!
General linguistic sources: http://www.alliterative.net/general-credits
Images used under Creative Commons license:
Cranberry flowers by Bernd Haynold, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Vaccinum_oxycoccos_120604.jpg
Crane's bill by Chris Denny, https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/3656092
Geranium seed pod by Pethan, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Geranium_sanguineum02.jpg
M...
published: 04 May 2021
-
Zodeakus El Roundtable Etymology, Astronomy and Biblica
DVD's available! Contact [email protected]
Moorish Directory.com and Northwest Amexem, Fez Province Regency Present Zodeakus El Roundtable "Etymology, Astronomy and Biblica"
Check out www.fezprovinceregency.org for Moor Info!
published: 18 Sep 2015
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What is the Etymological Fallacy?
An explanation of the etymological fallacy, a fallacy for the interpretation of terms in an argument and how you can avoid it with the philosophical principle of charity.
Sponsors: NBA_Ruby, Antybodi, Federico Galvão, Mike Gloudemans, Andrew Sullivan, Eugene SY, Tyler James, Antoinemp1, Dennis Sexton, Joao Sa, Joshua Furman, Multitude, Ploney, Avatar, Diéssica, GhostlyYorick, Hendrick McDonald, horace chan, Will DeRousse, Star Gazer, Paul Linkogle, Julian Seidl, Doǧan Çetin, and Daniel West. Thanks for your support on Patreon! If you want to become a patron, follow this link: https://www.patreon.com/Carneades
Here are some videos you might enjoy:
The 100 Days of Logic (https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLz0n_SjOttTcjHsuebLrl0fjab5fdToui)
History of Philosophy (https://youtube.com/play...
published: 13 Feb 2023
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The Etymology of "Government"
Subscribe for more word origins -- and send me your requests for more words in the comments!
SOURCES:
General etymological information:
Etymonline (https://www.etymonline.com/search?q=government)
MUSIC:
https://youtu.be/5mgYnwhM4eg
*This video is for educational purposes. None of the sampled content used is being reproduced for profit, and remains the property of the original owner.*
published: 02 Mar 2021
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J-Griff EXPOSES How the System Operates (Etymology Masterclass)
In this episode, J-Griff breaks down the foundational things anyone needs to understand to fully comprehend how the WHOLE SYSTEM operates. Words cast spells and are very powerful- this is an episode you do not want to miss!
#sovereignty #commerce #etymology
====================================
JOIN THE ALIGNED ENTREPRENEUR ACADEMY ACCELERATOR PROGRAM:
https://www.jgriff.org/aeacademy
JOIN OUR FREE CREDIT REPAIR & OPTIMIZATION FOUNDATIONS COURSE:
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MORE INFO ON/APPLY FOR THE LEVEL UP COLLECTIVE:
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TUNE INTO THE CONSCIOUS WEALTH PODCAST ON APPLE PODCAST:
https://apple.co/3WKEiRV
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https://spoti.fi/3vDQKHb
WEBSITE:
https://www.JGriff.org
JOIN OUR FREE EDUCATIONAL EMAIL NEWSLET...
published: 26 Aug 2022
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IT'S ALL CONNECTED #etymology #linguistics #language #history
published: 17 Aug 2024
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The Interesting Etymology Behind 70 Words
Etymology is not an exact science, but the stories behind word origins and etymologies can still teach us a lot about linguistics. In this episode of The List Show, Erin breaks down the interesting etymology of 70 words, from vaccine to science.
You'll learn the etymology of vaccine and much more.
In case you forgot, The List Show is a trivia-tastic, fact-filled show for curious people. Subscribe here for new Mental Floss episodes every Wednesday: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpZ5qUqpW4hW4zdfuBxMSJA?sub_confirmation=1
Website: http://www.mentalfloss.com
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/mental_floss
Facebook: https://facebook.com/mentalflossmagazine
published: 16 Jun 2021
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Etymological Fallacy: Origin of Change -- Logic Series | Academy 4 Social Change
The etymological fallacy is a logical fallacy in which the historical or original meaning of a word or phrase is reasoned to be the same as or similar to its actual present-day usage. This misconception most commonly occurs when the older meaning of a word is insisted to be its “proper” meaning.
**Find a transcript, lesson plans, worksheets, and more at: https://academy4sc.org/topic/etymological-fallacy-origin-of-change/
**Think Further Questions:
1. Where do you see the etymological fallacy being used?
2. What steps can you take to prevent yourself from committing an etymological fallacy?
3. How can you spot an etymological fallacy?
**Contents
00:00 - Background
00:37 - Explanation
00:53- Etymological Fallacy
01:10 - How It Works
01:43 - So What
#academy4sc #civicseducation #logic
published: 06 May 2020
13:48
Etymology and surprising origins of English words
Learn about etymology, the study of word origins and derivations in historical linguistics, and the influence of a Proto-Indoeuropean (PIE) language in the form...
Learn about etymology, the study of word origins and derivations in historical linguistics, and the influence of a Proto-Indoeuropean (PIE) language in the formation of English and other modern languages in Europe, Russia, and Asia. Highlighted is how etymologists have come up with a theoretical model of the Proto-Indoeuropean language; how Modern English was influenced by the Proto-Germanic and Latin languages, both descendants of PIE; and how English continues to borrow words from other languages.
TO CLARIFY THE ORIGIN OF "WAR"
PIE *wers- "to confuse, mix up" ► Frankish *werra ► Old North French "werre (Old French "guerre," meaning dispute, war) ► late Old English wyrre, werre "large-scale military conflict." Cognates suggest the original sense was "to bring into confusion." There's much confusion in the history of the word in European languages because they borrowed it either from the Germanic or from the Latin root. Etymological trees can have many twisted and intersecting branches (which makes me glad I'm not an etymologist:)
[CC] English | Español | Português.
JOIN THIS CHANNEL AND GET ACCESS TO MEMBERSHIP PERKS
https://www.youtube.com/snaplanguage/join
SUPPORT SNAP LANGUAGE
To support our work, you can become a patron at https://patreon.com/snaplanguage
OUR WEBSITE
https://snaplanguage.io.
OUR CHANNELS
Snap Language Learner https://youtube.com/snaplanguagelearner
Snap Language https://youtube.com/snaplanguage
RELATED LINKS
Scientific American (2018). New Evidence Fuels Debate over the Origin of Modern Languages (web article):
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/new-evidence-fuels-debate-over-the-origin-of-modern-languages/
Business Insider (2015). "This animated map shows how European languages evolved" (web article and animated map): http://www.businessinsider.com/animated-map-displays-spread-european-language-europe-russia-asia-history-2015-3
*Note: There are disagreements regarding where PIE originated and exactly how it spread.
Dictionary.com. "What Percentage of English Words are Derived from Latin?" (web article): http://dictionary.com/e/word-origins
Kutsui (Wikipedia User) "Countries where an Indo-European language is: a primary de facto national or official language a secondary official language officially recognized" (map): https://goo.gl/P8nxGV
Wikipedia. "Cot–caught merger" (web article about how the distinction in the vowel sounds of "cot" and "caught" is being lost in North American English): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cot%E2%80%93caught_merger
Slate. "Languages that have contributed to English vocabulary over time" (web article) http://www.slate.com/blogs/lexicon_valley/2014/03/10/etymology_languages_that_have_contributed_to_english_vocabulary_over_time.html
Ted.com. "20 words that once meant something very different" (web article illustrating semantic change): http://ideas.ted.com/20-words-that-once-meant-something-very-different/
Soho Press. "The Proto-Indo-European family" (web article briefly explaining how etymologists built the "family tree for Indo-European;" includes a chart showing the modern languages descending from Proto-Indoeuropean): https://sohopress.com/the-proto-indo-european-family/
Wikipedia. "Lists of English words by country or language of origin" (web page): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_English_words_by_country_or_language_of_origin
MUSIC
"And Then We Take Them Down Again" by Dokashiteru (feat. Susan Joseph)
"Wavering" Artificial Music by Aryll Fae
#language #linguistics #etymology
https://wn.com/Etymology_And_Surprising_Origins_Of_English_Words
Learn about etymology, the study of word origins and derivations in historical linguistics, and the influence of a Proto-Indoeuropean (PIE) language in the formation of English and other modern languages in Europe, Russia, and Asia. Highlighted is how etymologists have come up with a theoretical model of the Proto-Indoeuropean language; how Modern English was influenced by the Proto-Germanic and Latin languages, both descendants of PIE; and how English continues to borrow words from other languages.
TO CLARIFY THE ORIGIN OF "WAR"
PIE *wers- "to confuse, mix up" ► Frankish *werra ► Old North French "werre (Old French "guerre," meaning dispute, war) ► late Old English wyrre, werre "large-scale military conflict." Cognates suggest the original sense was "to bring into confusion." There's much confusion in the history of the word in European languages because they borrowed it either from the Germanic or from the Latin root. Etymological trees can have many twisted and intersecting branches (which makes me glad I'm not an etymologist:)
[CC] English | Español | Português.
JOIN THIS CHANNEL AND GET ACCESS TO MEMBERSHIP PERKS
https://www.youtube.com/snaplanguage/join
SUPPORT SNAP LANGUAGE
To support our work, you can become a patron at https://patreon.com/snaplanguage
OUR WEBSITE
https://snaplanguage.io.
OUR CHANNELS
Snap Language Learner https://youtube.com/snaplanguagelearner
Snap Language https://youtube.com/snaplanguage
RELATED LINKS
Scientific American (2018). New Evidence Fuels Debate over the Origin of Modern Languages (web article):
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/new-evidence-fuels-debate-over-the-origin-of-modern-languages/
Business Insider (2015). "This animated map shows how European languages evolved" (web article and animated map): http://www.businessinsider.com/animated-map-displays-spread-european-language-europe-russia-asia-history-2015-3
*Note: There are disagreements regarding where PIE originated and exactly how it spread.
Dictionary.com. "What Percentage of English Words are Derived from Latin?" (web article): http://dictionary.com/e/word-origins
Kutsui (Wikipedia User) "Countries where an Indo-European language is: a primary de facto national or official language a secondary official language officially recognized" (map): https://goo.gl/P8nxGV
Wikipedia. "Cot–caught merger" (web article about how the distinction in the vowel sounds of "cot" and "caught" is being lost in North American English): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cot%E2%80%93caught_merger
Slate. "Languages that have contributed to English vocabulary over time" (web article) http://www.slate.com/blogs/lexicon_valley/2014/03/10/etymology_languages_that_have_contributed_to_english_vocabulary_over_time.html
Ted.com. "20 words that once meant something very different" (web article illustrating semantic change): http://ideas.ted.com/20-words-that-once-meant-something-very-different/
Soho Press. "The Proto-Indo-European family" (web article briefly explaining how etymologists built the "family tree for Indo-European;" includes a chart showing the modern languages descending from Proto-Indoeuropean): https://sohopress.com/the-proto-indo-european-family/
Wikipedia. "Lists of English words by country or language of origin" (web page): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_English_words_by_country_or_language_of_origin
MUSIC
"And Then We Take Them Down Again" by Dokashiteru (feat. Susan Joseph)
"Wavering" Artificial Music by Aryll Fae
#language #linguistics #etymology
- published: 28 Sep 2017
- views: 484502
0:34
Etymological Meaning
Video shows what etymological means. Of or relating to etymology.. Consistent with its etymological characteristics (in historical usage and/or the source langu...
Video shows what etymological means. Of or relating to etymology.. Consistent with its etymological characteristics (in historical usage and/or the source language).. Etymological Meaning. How to pronounce, definition audio dictionary. How to say etymological. Powered by MaryTTS, Wiktionary
https://wn.com/Etymological_Meaning
Video shows what etymological means. Of or relating to etymology.. Consistent with its etymological characteristics (in historical usage and/or the source language).. Etymological Meaning. How to pronounce, definition audio dictionary. How to say etymological. Powered by MaryTTS, Wiktionary
- published: 18 Apr 2015
- views: 6182
4:11
Fruit: Surprisingly Connected Etymologies
Five fruit-related words with unexpected connections.
Thank you to our newest Patreon supporters, Guille Puerto, Ann Miller, Alex Katz, Dan Pugh, William C. Fo...
Five fruit-related words with unexpected connections.
Thank you to our newest Patreon supporters, Guille Puerto, Ann Miller, Alex Katz, Dan Pugh, William C. Fox, and Lexitecture! To join them, check out our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/TheEndlessKnot
Endless Knot posters are on RedBubble: https://www.redbubble.com/people/EndlessKnot/shop?asc=u
Let us know if there are more video posters you want to see there!
General linguistic sources: http://www.alliterative.net/general-credits
Images used under Creative Commons license:
Cranberry flowers by Bernd Haynold, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Vaccinum_oxycoccos_120604.jpg
Crane's bill by Chris Denny, https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/3656092
Geranium seed pod by Pethan, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Geranium_sanguineum02.jpg
Mildew by Jerzy Opioła, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Powdery_Mildew_Acer_DK43_(1).jpg
Honeydew by Rosser1954, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Detail_of_honeydew_rain_on_a_beech_leaf.jpg
Curling by Bjarte Hetland, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Curling_Canada_Torino_2006.jpg
Website: http://www.alliterative.net/
Click here to sign up for our video email list, to be notified when new videos are posted: http://eepurl.com/6YuJv
Click here to sign up for our podcast email list, to be notified when new podcast episodes go up:
http://eepurl.com/btmBZT
Transcript:
Today in “Surprisingly Connected Etymologies”, we’re biting into some fruit!
The words apricot and precocious would seem to have little to do with one another. But in fact they both come from Latin prae- “before” + coquere “cook, ripen”. An apricot is an early ripening fruit, and a precocious person is a metaphorically early ripening person. The unusual form of the word apricot is due to the circuitous path it took in getting to English. Latin (malum) praecoquum “early-ripening (fruit)” became Byzantine Greek berikokkia, which became Arabic al-birquq, which became Portuguese albricoque, which eventually came into 16th century English as abrecock, eventually becoming apricot.
The cranberry and geranium plants aren't related botanically, but etymologically they are! The cran in cranberry comes from low German kraan “crane” because of the resemblance of the flower’s stamen to the bird’s bill. The bird’s name comes from Proto-Indo-European *gere- “to cry hoarsely” because of its call. This led to the Greek name for the bird geranos “crane” and thence to geranium from the resemblance of the plant’s seed pod to the bird’s bill.
Can a nectarine be a nuisance? Well, etymologically it can. Nectarine is formed from nectar which comes ultimately from Greek nektar, the name of the drink of the gods, made up of the elements nek “death” (from Proto-Indo-European *nek- “death”) + tar “overcoming” (from Proto-Indo-European *tere- “cross over, pass through, overcome”). Thus nectar means literally “overcoming death”. That death root also came into Latin as nocere “to hurt”, producing Old French nuire “to harm” and nuisance “harm, wrong, damage”, which obviously softened over time to give us the current sense of English nuisance. That Latin verb nocere, by the way, was also combined with the negative prefix in- to eventually give us the word innocent, so perhaps we better leave the innocent nectarine alone.
You’d probably be grossed out to think of marmalade and mildew together, but etymologically they're connected. Marmalade originally referred to a quince jelly, from Portuguese marmelo “quince”, originally from Greek melimelon, literally “honey-apple” from meli “honey” + melon “apple” (yes, a melon was originally an apple). Greek meli comes from Proto-Indo-European *melit- “honey”, which also made it into the Germanic branch of languages, where it becomes the first element of Old English meledeaw, literally “honeydew”, the sticky substance left on leaves by aphids, earlier thought to form out of the air like dew. Later on the word mildew was used to refer to a type of fungus because it was sticky and found growing on plants.
What does curling have to do with grapes? Etymology! Curling gets its name from the way the stone curls on the ice, and can be traced back to the root *g(e)r- “curving, crooked”. This also produced Germanic *krappon “hook”, and from that Old French graper “catch with a hook, pick grapes”, so basically the word transferred from referring to the vine hook used for picking grapes to the grapes themselves, replacing the Old English word winberige, literally “wine berry”.
Thanks for watching! This is one in a series of occasional short videos about connected etymologies; to see more, you can also follow the Endless Knot on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram.
https://wn.com/Fruit_Surprisingly_Connected_Etymologies
Five fruit-related words with unexpected connections.
Thank you to our newest Patreon supporters, Guille Puerto, Ann Miller, Alex Katz, Dan Pugh, William C. Fox, and Lexitecture! To join them, check out our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/TheEndlessKnot
Endless Knot posters are on RedBubble: https://www.redbubble.com/people/EndlessKnot/shop?asc=u
Let us know if there are more video posters you want to see there!
General linguistic sources: http://www.alliterative.net/general-credits
Images used under Creative Commons license:
Cranberry flowers by Bernd Haynold, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Vaccinum_oxycoccos_120604.jpg
Crane's bill by Chris Denny, https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/3656092
Geranium seed pod by Pethan, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Geranium_sanguineum02.jpg
Mildew by Jerzy Opioła, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Powdery_Mildew_Acer_DK43_(1).jpg
Honeydew by Rosser1954, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Detail_of_honeydew_rain_on_a_beech_leaf.jpg
Curling by Bjarte Hetland, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Curling_Canada_Torino_2006.jpg
Website: http://www.alliterative.net/
Click here to sign up for our video email list, to be notified when new videos are posted: http://eepurl.com/6YuJv
Click here to sign up for our podcast email list, to be notified when new podcast episodes go up:
http://eepurl.com/btmBZT
Transcript:
Today in “Surprisingly Connected Etymologies”, we’re biting into some fruit!
The words apricot and precocious would seem to have little to do with one another. But in fact they both come from Latin prae- “before” + coquere “cook, ripen”. An apricot is an early ripening fruit, and a precocious person is a metaphorically early ripening person. The unusual form of the word apricot is due to the circuitous path it took in getting to English. Latin (malum) praecoquum “early-ripening (fruit)” became Byzantine Greek berikokkia, which became Arabic al-birquq, which became Portuguese albricoque, which eventually came into 16th century English as abrecock, eventually becoming apricot.
The cranberry and geranium plants aren't related botanically, but etymologically they are! The cran in cranberry comes from low German kraan “crane” because of the resemblance of the flower’s stamen to the bird’s bill. The bird’s name comes from Proto-Indo-European *gere- “to cry hoarsely” because of its call. This led to the Greek name for the bird geranos “crane” and thence to geranium from the resemblance of the plant’s seed pod to the bird’s bill.
Can a nectarine be a nuisance? Well, etymologically it can. Nectarine is formed from nectar which comes ultimately from Greek nektar, the name of the drink of the gods, made up of the elements nek “death” (from Proto-Indo-European *nek- “death”) + tar “overcoming” (from Proto-Indo-European *tere- “cross over, pass through, overcome”). Thus nectar means literally “overcoming death”. That death root also came into Latin as nocere “to hurt”, producing Old French nuire “to harm” and nuisance “harm, wrong, damage”, which obviously softened over time to give us the current sense of English nuisance. That Latin verb nocere, by the way, was also combined with the negative prefix in- to eventually give us the word innocent, so perhaps we better leave the innocent nectarine alone.
You’d probably be grossed out to think of marmalade and mildew together, but etymologically they're connected. Marmalade originally referred to a quince jelly, from Portuguese marmelo “quince”, originally from Greek melimelon, literally “honey-apple” from meli “honey” + melon “apple” (yes, a melon was originally an apple). Greek meli comes from Proto-Indo-European *melit- “honey”, which also made it into the Germanic branch of languages, where it becomes the first element of Old English meledeaw, literally “honeydew”, the sticky substance left on leaves by aphids, earlier thought to form out of the air like dew. Later on the word mildew was used to refer to a type of fungus because it was sticky and found growing on plants.
What does curling have to do with grapes? Etymology! Curling gets its name from the way the stone curls on the ice, and can be traced back to the root *g(e)r- “curving, crooked”. This also produced Germanic *krappon “hook”, and from that Old French graper “catch with a hook, pick grapes”, so basically the word transferred from referring to the vine hook used for picking grapes to the grapes themselves, replacing the Old English word winberige, literally “wine berry”.
Thanks for watching! This is one in a series of occasional short videos about connected etymologies; to see more, you can also follow the Endless Knot on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram.
- published: 04 May 2021
- views: 3602
2:09:43
Zodeakus El Roundtable Etymology, Astronomy and Biblica
DVD's available! Contact
[email protected]
Moorish Directory.com and Northwest Amexem, Fez Province Regency Present Zodeakus El Roundtable "Etymology, Astro...
DVD's available! Contact
[email protected]
Moorish Directory.com and Northwest Amexem, Fez Province Regency Present Zodeakus El Roundtable "Etymology, Astronomy and Biblica"
Check out www.fezprovinceregency.org for Moor Info!
https://wn.com/Zodeakus_El_Roundtable_Etymology,_Astronomy_And_Biblica
DVD's available! Contact
[email protected]
Moorish Directory.com and Northwest Amexem, Fez Province Regency Present Zodeakus El Roundtable "Etymology, Astronomy and Biblica"
Check out www.fezprovinceregency.org for Moor Info!
- published: 18 Sep 2015
- views: 444842
9:13
What is the Etymological Fallacy?
An explanation of the etymological fallacy, a fallacy for the interpretation of terms in an argument and how you can avoid it with the philosophical principle o...
An explanation of the etymological fallacy, a fallacy for the interpretation of terms in an argument and how you can avoid it with the philosophical principle of charity.
Sponsors: NBA_Ruby, Antybodi, Federico Galvão, Mike Gloudemans, Andrew Sullivan, Eugene SY, Tyler James, Antoinemp1, Dennis Sexton, Joao Sa, Joshua Furman, Multitude, Ploney, Avatar, Diéssica, GhostlyYorick, Hendrick McDonald, horace chan, Will DeRousse, Star Gazer, Paul Linkogle, Julian Seidl, Doǧan Çetin, and Daniel West. Thanks for your support on Patreon! If you want to become a patron, follow this link: https://www.patreon.com/Carneades
Here are some videos you might enjoy:
The 100 Days of Logic (https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLz0n_SjOttTcjHsuebLrl0fjab5fdToui)
History of Philosophy (https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLz0n_SjOttTc3DVJVu-A7Oz9PPSR2eCN5)
Ancient Philosophers & Zeno’s Paradoxes (https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLz0n_SjOttTe34Mjc1e2ar_qqpMqcpxvv)
ExPhi Experimental Philosophy (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCa9HhN3Obz4xq_jyPlZE_lw)
Map of Philosophy (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YxBShJU_CKs)
More videos with Carneades (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1VzCyqpmCaRh8_BnijbOvg)
Philosophy by Topic:
Epistemology: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLz0n_SjOttTc2k5SeO8VJYS_Yl9THy6cM
Metaphysics: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLz0n_SjOttTeXRZhIv0tr-dWiG2NQJ9jT
Political Philosophy: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLz0n_SjOttTfaixflq-_HpB60jNz9uFJt
Philosophy of Religion: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLz0n_SjOttTcrnflyetSnrzk_hWOPtzCe
Ancient Philosophy: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLz0n_SjOttTcBISYZ7mSQVzPizR17dQGh
Philosophy of Science: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLz0n_SjOttTf9XmTQncrxtuWPEvXN9vUC
Philosophy of Language: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLz0n_SjOttTeQkp6SFbnWjluJXUUvZK7n
Philosophy of Art/Aesthetics: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLz0n_SjOttTfJ-FYWvSButSSRYjAc_4ps
Buy stuff with Zazzle: https://www.zazzle.com/store/carneades?rf=238568769552007656
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Information for this video gathered from The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy, The Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, The Oxford Companion to Philosophy, The Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, The Collier-MacMillan Encyclopedia of Philosophy, the Dictionary of Continental Philosophy, and more! (#fallacy #philosophy)
https://wn.com/What_Is_The_Etymological_Fallacy
An explanation of the etymological fallacy, a fallacy for the interpretation of terms in an argument and how you can avoid it with the philosophical principle of charity.
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Information for this video gathered from The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy, The Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, The Oxford Companion to Philosophy, The Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, The Collier-MacMillan Encyclopedia of Philosophy, the Dictionary of Continental Philosophy, and more! (#fallacy #philosophy)
- published: 13 Feb 2023
- views: 3659
1:13
The Etymology of "Government"
Subscribe for more word origins -- and send me your requests for more words in the comments!
SOURCES:
General etymological information:
Etymonline (https://www...
Subscribe for more word origins -- and send me your requests for more words in the comments!
SOURCES:
General etymological information:
Etymonline (https://www.etymonline.com/search?q=government)
MUSIC:
https://youtu.be/5mgYnwhM4eg
*This video is for educational purposes. None of the sampled content used is being reproduced for profit, and remains the property of the original owner.*
https://wn.com/The_Etymology_Of_Government
Subscribe for more word origins -- and send me your requests for more words in the comments!
SOURCES:
General etymological information:
Etymonline (https://www.etymonline.com/search?q=government)
MUSIC:
https://youtu.be/5mgYnwhM4eg
*This video is for educational purposes. None of the sampled content used is being reproduced for profit, and remains the property of the original owner.*
- published: 02 Mar 2021
- views: 4408
1:25:11
J-Griff EXPOSES How the System Operates (Etymology Masterclass)
In this episode, J-Griff breaks down the foundational things anyone needs to understand to fully comprehend how the WHOLE SYSTEM operates. Words cast spells and...
In this episode, J-Griff breaks down the foundational things anyone needs to understand to fully comprehend how the WHOLE SYSTEM operates. Words cast spells and are very powerful- this is an episode you do not want to miss!
#sovereignty #commerce #etymology
====================================
JOIN THE ALIGNED ENTREPRENEUR ACADEMY ACCELERATOR PROGRAM:
https://www.jgriff.org/aeacademy
JOIN OUR FREE CREDIT REPAIR & OPTIMIZATION FOUNDATIONS COURSE:
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https://wn.com/J_Griff_Exposes_How_The_System_Operates_(Etymology_Masterclass)
In this episode, J-Griff breaks down the foundational things anyone needs to understand to fully comprehend how the WHOLE SYSTEM operates. Words cast spells and are very powerful- this is an episode you do not want to miss!
#sovereignty #commerce #etymology
====================================
JOIN THE ALIGNED ENTREPRENEUR ACADEMY ACCELERATOR PROGRAM:
https://www.jgriff.org/aeacademy
JOIN OUR FREE CREDIT REPAIR & OPTIMIZATION FOUNDATIONS COURSE:
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MORE INFO ON/APPLY FOR THE LEVEL UP COLLECTIVE:
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TUNE INTO THE CONSCIOUS WEALTH PODCAST ON APPLE PODCAST:
https://apple.co/3WKEiRV
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https://spoti.fi/3vDQKHb
WEBSITE:
https://www.JGriff.org
JOIN OUR FREE EDUCATIONAL EMAIL NEWSLETTER:
https://bit.ly/3HB93jQ
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- published: 26 Aug 2022
- views: 320643
27:44
The Interesting Etymology Behind 70 Words
Etymology is not an exact science, but the stories behind word origins and etymologies can still teach us a lot about linguistics. In this episode of The List S...
Etymology is not an exact science, but the stories behind word origins and etymologies can still teach us a lot about linguistics. In this episode of The List Show, Erin breaks down the interesting etymology of 70 words, from vaccine to science.
You'll learn the etymology of vaccine and much more.
In case you forgot, The List Show is a trivia-tastic, fact-filled show for curious people. Subscribe here for new Mental Floss episodes every Wednesday: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpZ5qUqpW4hW4zdfuBxMSJA?sub_confirmation=1
Website: http://www.mentalfloss.com
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/mental_floss
Facebook: https://facebook.com/mentalflossmagazine
https://wn.com/The_Interesting_Etymology_Behind_70_Words
Etymology is not an exact science, but the stories behind word origins and etymologies can still teach us a lot about linguistics. In this episode of The List Show, Erin breaks down the interesting etymology of 70 words, from vaccine to science.
You'll learn the etymology of vaccine and much more.
In case you forgot, The List Show is a trivia-tastic, fact-filled show for curious people. Subscribe here for new Mental Floss episodes every Wednesday: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpZ5qUqpW4hW4zdfuBxMSJA?sub_confirmation=1
Website: http://www.mentalfloss.com
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/mental_floss
Facebook: https://facebook.com/mentalflossmagazine
- published: 16 Jun 2021
- views: 265114
2:56
Etymological Fallacy: Origin of Change -- Logic Series | Academy 4 Social Change
The etymological fallacy is a logical fallacy in which the historical or original meaning of a word or phrase is reasoned to be the same as or similar to its ac...
The etymological fallacy is a logical fallacy in which the historical or original meaning of a word or phrase is reasoned to be the same as or similar to its actual present-day usage. This misconception most commonly occurs when the older meaning of a word is insisted to be its “proper” meaning.
**Find a transcript, lesson plans, worksheets, and more at: https://academy4sc.org/topic/etymological-fallacy-origin-of-change/
**Think Further Questions:
1. Where do you see the etymological fallacy being used?
2. What steps can you take to prevent yourself from committing an etymological fallacy?
3. How can you spot an etymological fallacy?
**Contents
00:00 - Background
00:37 - Explanation
00:53- Etymological Fallacy
01:10 - How It Works
01:43 - So What
#academy4sc #civicseducation #logic
https://wn.com/Etymological_Fallacy_Origin_Of_Change_Logic_Series_|_Academy_4_Social_Change
The etymological fallacy is a logical fallacy in which the historical or original meaning of a word or phrase is reasoned to be the same as or similar to its actual present-day usage. This misconception most commonly occurs when the older meaning of a word is insisted to be its “proper” meaning.
**Find a transcript, lesson plans, worksheets, and more at: https://academy4sc.org/topic/etymological-fallacy-origin-of-change/
**Think Further Questions:
1. Where do you see the etymological fallacy being used?
2. What steps can you take to prevent yourself from committing an etymological fallacy?
3. How can you spot an etymological fallacy?
**Contents
00:00 - Background
00:37 - Explanation
00:53- Etymological Fallacy
01:10 - How It Works
01:43 - So What
#academy4sc #civicseducation #logic
- published: 06 May 2020
- views: 850