0:00:00.320,0:00:01.230 - [David] Hello readers, 0:00:01.230,0:00:03.210 today I want to talk about vocabulary 0:00:03.210,0:00:06.580 and how many English words[br]have Greek or Latin roots 0:00:06.580,0:00:10.170 embedded in them and how you[br]can use that to your advantage. 0:00:10.170,0:00:13.320 The story of why English has[br]Greek and Latin in it at all 0:00:13.320,0:00:14.830 is super fascinating to me 0:00:14.830,0:00:16.270 and if I allowed myself, I'd go off 0:00:16.270,0:00:17.430 on a big old tangent about it 0:00:17.430,0:00:18.886 but let's save that for another time. 0:00:18.886,0:00:20.556 Suffice it to say that English has 0:00:20.556,0:00:25.270 Latin and Greek chunks in[br]it for fun history reasons 0:00:25.270,0:00:27.289 and let's just leave it at that for now. 0:00:27.289,0:00:28.920 I'm not gonna say that you need to be able 0:00:28.920,0:00:31.390 to speak modern Greek[br]or read ancient Latin 0:00:31.390,0:00:32.560 in order to understand English 0:00:32.560,0:00:34.600 but many complicated words are made up 0:00:34.600,0:00:37.350 of little language building[br]blocks that we can break apart, 0:00:37.350,0:00:40.257 using the power of understanding! 0:00:40.257,0:00:41.860 (explosion) 0:00:41.860,0:00:42.693 That was cool right? 0:00:42.693,0:00:43.526 I'm cool? 0:00:43.526,0:00:44.550 I'm cool. 0:00:44.550,0:00:47.810 I'm gonna introduce some[br]vocabulary about vocabulary now, 0:00:47.810,0:00:49.240 so brace yourselves. 0:00:49.240,0:00:51.700 There's this idea of a root word. 0:00:51.700,0:00:54.620 Take the word dent,[br]which is Latin for tooth. 0:00:54.620,0:00:57.570 From that root word, we can[br]get the adjective dental, 0:00:57.570,0:00:59.310 which means about teeth, 0:00:59.310,0:01:01.730 or the noun dentist, which means a person 0:01:01.730,0:01:03.030 who specializes in teeth, 0:01:03.030,0:01:05.860 or the noun dentures,[br]which are false teeth. 0:01:05.860,0:01:08.710 That's what a root is. 0:01:08.710,0:01:11.033 Now you can also combine[br]roots to make words. 0:01:11.033,0:01:14.412 The word phot is Greek for light, 0:01:14.412,0:01:19.412 the root graph comes from[br]the Greek for writing. 0:01:19.640,0:01:22.804 You put those together, you get photograph 0:01:22.804,0:01:25.599 or writing with light. 0:01:25.599,0:01:27.960 It's kind of poetic, isn't it? 0:01:27.960,0:01:32.453 To this understanding, let[br]us add the idea of an affix. 0:01:32.453,0:01:36.670 Affixes aren't words or roots[br]but they are word particles 0:01:36.670,0:01:38.090 that convey meaning. 0:01:38.090,0:01:40.460 Maybe you've heard of[br]prefixes and suffixes, 0:01:40.460,0:01:43.750 if you have, these are[br]both types of affixes. 0:01:43.750,0:01:45.920 Prefixes attach at the[br]front end of a word, 0:01:45.920,0:01:48.300 whereas suffixes attach at the back end. 0:01:48.300,0:01:52.250 An example of a suffix would[br]be logy, meaning the study of 0:01:52.250,0:01:53.750 or the science of. 0:01:53.750,0:01:55.710 So we can make a bunch of words with logy, 0:01:55.710,0:01:59.840 like biology, that's supposed[br]to be a little amoeba; 0:01:59.840,0:02:02.910 cetology, the study or science of whales; 0:02:02.910,0:02:06.303 anthropology, the study of human beings; 0:02:07.210,0:02:10.640 cosmology, the study of the universe. 0:02:10.640,0:02:13.940 So if you see a logy, it's[br]going to be some kind of science 0:02:13.940,0:02:16.460 or specialized area of study. 0:02:16.460,0:02:19.410 A good example of a prefix[br]would be the Greek para, 0:02:19.410,0:02:21.610 which means alongside. 0:02:21.610,0:02:24.500 So a paralegal is someone[br]who works alongside lawyers, 0:02:24.500,0:02:26.794 a paramedic works alongside doctors 0:02:26.794,0:02:28.830 and if your house is[br]haunted, you don't need 0:02:28.830,0:02:31.199 a normal pest control expert[br]to get rid of the ghost, 0:02:31.199,0:02:33.878 you need a paranormal pest control expert, 0:02:33.878,0:02:36.939 one that is alongside[br]but not within normalcy 0:02:36.939,0:02:40.280 and thus, you call the Ghostbusters. 0:02:40.280,0:02:43.890 So what does all of this[br]mean for you as a reader? 0:02:43.890,0:02:46.600 Well when I encounter a[br]word I don't understand, 0:02:46.600,0:02:49.490 it's like I had been[br]walking down a hallway 0:02:49.490,0:02:52.430 and was suddenly confronted[br]with a locked door. 0:02:52.430,0:02:57.270 It's frustrating but the[br]magic, the power of studying 0:02:57.270,0:02:59.740 roots, prefixes and suffixes[br]is that when you master 0:02:59.740,0:03:03.110 a small handful of them,[br]you suddenly become 0:03:03.110,0:03:05.290 the proud owner of a ring of keys. 0:03:05.290,0:03:10.040 Doors fling themselves open[br]for you, you can go anywhere, 0:03:10.040,0:03:13.460 you can understand any concept,[br]any piece of vocabulary. 0:03:13.460,0:03:17.000 An army of locked doors fall[br]off their hinges all at once 0:03:17.000,0:03:18.480 when you approach. 0:03:18.480,0:03:19.810 Don't believe me? 0:03:19.810,0:03:21.180 I'll show you. 0:03:21.180,0:03:24.770 While excavating the foundation[br]for a geothermal plant, 0:03:24.770,0:03:28.060 my companion Neha found a fossil. 0:03:28.060,0:03:31.360 Upon closer inspection, she[br]realized it was a pterodactyl. 0:03:31.360,0:03:35.360 Wow, lot of big words in[br]that little paragraph. 0:03:35.360,0:03:37.740 Now, watch this. 0:03:37.740,0:03:39.400 Excavating, 0:03:39.400,0:03:41.870 so hollowing out. 0:03:41.870,0:03:45.300 Foundation, bottom-making. 0:03:45.300,0:03:48.781 Geothermal, Earth heat. 0:03:48.781,0:03:53.781 Companion, so this is someone[br]you would eat bread with, 0:03:54.400,0:03:57.742 so bread together, who do[br]we eat bread together with? 0:03:57.742,0:03:59.470 Our friends. 0:03:59.470,0:04:01.220 Inspection, 0:04:01.220,0:04:02.860 looking in 0:04:02.860,0:04:04.140 or closer 0:04:04.140,0:04:05.263 and pterodactyl, 0:04:06.540,0:04:08.670 pter means wing, 0:04:08.670,0:04:10.690 dactyl means finger, 0:04:10.690,0:04:13.620 it is a prehistoric winged reptile. 0:04:13.620,0:04:17.020 So while she was digging in the ground 0:04:17.020,0:04:20.350 to prepare the bottom of a[br]plant that gets electricity 0:04:20.350,0:04:24.900 from the heat of the Earth,[br]my friend Neha found a fossil. 0:04:24.900,0:04:27.080 When she looked at it[br]closely, she realized it was 0:04:27.080,0:04:30.930 a flying reptile with fingery wings. 0:04:30.930,0:04:32.360 Do you see what I mean about keys? 0:04:32.360,0:04:34.830 Studying roots and[br]affixes gives me the power 0:04:34.830,0:04:37.389 to look at those words[br]and crack them apart. 0:04:37.389,0:04:39.952 You're not so big now, vocabulary word. 0:04:39.952,0:04:43.080 You have no power over me! 0:04:43.080,0:04:46.240 Studying roots, prefixes[br]and suffixes will give you 0:04:46.240,0:04:47.667 that same power. 0:04:47.667,0:04:50.110 I promise you it is awesome, 0:04:50.110,0:04:54.090 like, literally it fills[br]me with a sense of awe. 0:04:54.090,0:04:57.201 The power is yours for the taking. 0:04:57.201,0:05:00.543 You can learn anything, David out. 0:05:02.960,0:05:05.380 Okay are we doing those[br]fun history reasons though? 0:05:05.380,0:05:08.780 Okay, the short version[br]is that first the Romans 0:05:08.780,0:05:12.330 then some Vikings, then[br]some French Vikings invaded 0:05:12.330,0:05:14.440 the island of Great[br]Britain a bunch of times 0:05:14.440,0:05:17.191 over the last 1500 years,[br]shaping the language 0:05:17.191,0:05:20.660 and making what I like to[br]call French-shaped dents 0:05:20.660,0:05:22.947 in the Germanic structure of English. 0:05:22.947,0:05:24.890 English is a Germanic language, 0:05:24.890,0:05:26.834 French is a Romance language, 0:05:26.834,0:05:28.960 meaning not that it is full of love 0:05:28.960,0:05:32.990 but that it is an offshoot[br]of Latin or you know, Roman. 0:05:32.990,0:05:36.231 French took root in 11th Century[br]English and merged with it, 0:05:36.231,0:05:39.872 grafting an enormous amount[br]of Greek and Latin vocabulary 0:05:39.872,0:05:43.240 on to a German root stock. 0:05:43.240,0:05:46.200 We often reach for Latin[br]and Greek compounds 0:05:46.200,0:05:47.610 when we compose new words, 0:05:47.610,0:05:50.085 which is why we say television in English, 0:05:50.085,0:05:52.850 which comes from the Greek[br]tele, meaning far away, 0:05:52.850,0:05:55.022 and the Latin vire, meaning to see. 0:05:55.022,0:05:58.051 If we reached for Germanic[br]roots to make new words, 0:05:58.051,0:06:01.707 we'd call a television a[br]farseer because indeed, 0:06:01.707,0:06:05.402 that's what the word is[br]in German, fernsehen. 0:06:05.402,0:06:09.160 So why do we have Greek and[br]Latin in our vocabulary? 0:06:09.160,0:06:12.020 Because England was[br]colonized by French speakers 0:06:12.020,0:06:14.000 almost a thousand years ago. 0:06:14.000,0:06:15.412 Imagine what English will sound like 0:06:15.412,0:06:17.700 in another thousand years. 0:06:17.700,0:06:19.696 Anyway, thanks for coming[br]on this tangent with me. 0:06:19.696,0:06:22.303 David out for real this time, bye.