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Latin and Greek roots and affixes | Reading | Khan Academy

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    - [David] Hello readers,
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    today I want to talk about vocabulary
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    and how many English words
    have Greek or Latin roots
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    embedded in them and how you
    can use that to your advantage.
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    The story of why English has
    Greek and Latin in it at all
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    is super fascinating to me
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    and if I allowed myself, I'd go off
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    on a big old tangent about it
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    but let's save that for another time.
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    Suffice it to say that English has
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    Latin and Greek chunks in
    it for fun history reasons
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    and let's just leave it at that for now.
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    I'm not gonna say that you need to be able
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    to speak modern Greek
    or read ancient Latin
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    in order to understand English
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    but many complicated words are made up
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    of little language building
    blocks that we can break apart,
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    using the power of understanding!
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    (explosion)
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    That was cool right?
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    I'm cool?
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    I'm cool.
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    I'm gonna introduce some
    vocabulary about vocabulary now,
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    so brace yourselves.
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    There's this idea of a root word.
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    Take the word dent,
    which is Latin for tooth.
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    From that root word, we can
    get the adjective dental,
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    which means about teeth,
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    or the noun dentist, which means a person
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    who specializes in teeth,
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    or the noun dentures,
    which are false teeth.
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    That's what a root is.
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    Now you can also combine
    roots to make words.
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    The word phot is Greek for light,
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    the root graph comes from
    the Greek for writing.
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    You put those together, you get photograph
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    or writing with light.
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    It's kind of poetic, isn't it?
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    To this understanding, let
    us add the idea of an affix.
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    Affixes aren't words or roots
    but they are word particles
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    that convey meaning.
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    Maybe you've heard of
    prefixes and suffixes,
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    if you have, these are
    both types of affixes.
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    Prefixes attach at the
    front end of a word,
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    whereas suffixes attach at the back end.
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    An example of a suffix would
    be logy, meaning the study of
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    or the science of.
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    So we can make a bunch of words with logy,
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    like biology, that's supposed
    to be a little amoeba;
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    cetology, the study or science of whales;
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    anthropology, the study of human beings;
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    cosmology, the study of the universe.
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    So if you see a logy, it's
    going to be some kind of science
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    or specialized area of study.
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    A good example of a prefix
    would be the Greek para,
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    which means alongside.
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    So a paralegal is someone
    who works alongside lawyers,
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    a paramedic works alongside doctors
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    and if your house is
    haunted, you don't need
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    a normal pest control expert
    to get rid of the ghost,
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    you need a paranormal pest control expert,
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    one that is alongside
    but not within normalcy
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    and thus, you call the Ghostbusters.
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    So what does all of this
    mean for you as a reader?
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    Well when I encounter a
    word I don't understand,
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    it's like I had been
    walking down a hallway
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    and was suddenly confronted
    with a locked door.
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    It's frustrating but the
    magic, the power of studying
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    roots, prefixes and suffixes
    is that when you master
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    a small handful of them,
    you suddenly become
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    the proud owner of a ring of keys.
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    Doors fling themselves open
    for you, you can go anywhere,
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    you can understand any concept,
    any piece of vocabulary.
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    An army of locked doors fall
    off their hinges all at once
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    when you approach.
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    Don't believe me?
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    I'll show you.
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    While excavating the foundation
    for a geothermal plant,
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    my companion Neha found a fossil.
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    Upon closer inspection, she
    realized it was a pterodactyl.
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    Wow, lot of big words in
    that little paragraph.
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    Now, watch this.
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    Excavating,
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    so hollowing out.
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    Foundation, bottom-making.
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    Geothermal, Earth heat.
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    Companion, so this is someone
    you would eat bread with,
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    so bread together, who do
    we eat bread together with?
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    Our friends.
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    Inspection,
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    looking in
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    or closer
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    and pterodactyl,
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    pter means wing,
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    dactyl means finger,
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    it is a prehistoric winged reptile.
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    So while she was digging in the ground
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    to prepare the bottom of a
    plant that gets electricity
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    from the heat of the Earth,
    my friend Neha found a fossil.
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    When she looked at it
    closely, she realized it was
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    a flying reptile with fingery wings.
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    Do you see what I mean about keys?
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    Studying roots and
    affixes gives me the power
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    to look at those words
    and crack them apart.
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    You're not so big now, vocabulary word.
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    You have no power over me!
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    Studying roots, prefixes
    and suffixes will give you
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    that same power.
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    I promise you it is awesome,
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    like, literally it fills
    me with a sense of awe.
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    The power is yours for the taking.
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    You can learn anything, David out.
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    Okay are we doing those
    fun history reasons though?
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    Okay, the short version
    is that first the Romans
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    then some Vikings, then
    some French Vikings invaded
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    the island of Great
    Britain a bunch of times
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    over the last 1500 years,
    shaping the language
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    and making what I like to
    call French-shaped dents
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    in the Germanic structure of English.
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    English is a Germanic language,
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    French is a Romance language,
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    meaning not that it is full of love
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    but that it is an offshoot
    of Latin or you know, Roman.
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    French took root in 11th Century
    English and merged with it,
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    grafting an enormous amount
    of Greek and Latin vocabulary
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    on to a German root stock.
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    We often reach for Latin
    and Greek compounds
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    when we compose new words,
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    which is why we say television in English,
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    which comes from the Greek
    tele, meaning far away,
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    and the Latin vire, meaning to see.
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    If we reached for Germanic
    roots to make new words,
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    we'd call a television a
    farseer because indeed,
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    that's what the word is
    in German, fernsehen.
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    So why do we have Greek and
    Latin in our vocabulary?
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    Because England was
    colonized by French speakers
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    almost a thousand years ago.
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    Imagine what English will sound like
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    in another thousand years.
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    Anyway, thanks for coming
    on this tangent with me.
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    David out for real this time, bye.
Title:
Latin and Greek roots and affixes | Reading | Khan Academy
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Khan Academy
Duration:
06:23

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