Are you saying these wrong!? | EGGCORNS TEST

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English with Lucy

English with Lucy

Күн бұрын

14 phrases that native English speakers get wrong ALL the time - do YOU do it too?
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⏱ TIMESTAMPS:
0:00 Introduction
0:42 What is an eggcorn?
1:19 FREE PDF and QUIZ
1:58 PSA
2:37 To be pacific or be specific
3:11 Flesh out or flush out
4:05 Damp squid or damp squib
4:48 Nipped in the bud or nipped in the butt
5:25 Dog-eat-dog or doggie dog
6:12 Got off scotch-free or got off scot-free
7:01 To all intents and purposes or to all intensive purposes
7:43 Butt naked or buck naked
8:37 Passing mustard or passing muster
9:15 Biting my time or biding my time
9:54 As dusk fell or as dust fell
10:25 Last-ditch effort or last-stitch effort
11:09 A diamond dozen or a dime a dozen
11:42 A blessing in disguise or a blessing in the skies
12:12 An escaped goat or a scapegoat
13:16 FREE PDF and QUIZ
13:22 Courses and Challenges
13:41 OUTRO
🎥 Video edited by Liva Barkar
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#learnenglish #english #grammar

Пікірлер: 1 600
@EnglishwithLucy
@EnglishwithLucy 10 ай бұрын
Ok, be honest! How many were you saying wrong!? 📝 *GET THE FREE LESSON PDF* here 👉🏼 bit.ly/EggcornsPDF
@csatimaci
@csatimaci 10 ай бұрын
2... but, to be honest, I've never heard 2 of these phrases before.
@zeakura3500
@zeakura3500 10 ай бұрын
Several phrases i have never heard them as iam asian. thanks for this great video Lucy.
@Willpower757
@Willpower757 10 ай бұрын
I had never heard about eggcorns but got 6 wrong! Thank u so much!! ;)
@wdwscommittee1915
@wdwscommittee1915 10 ай бұрын
Yes
@khalidali8124
@khalidali8124 10 ай бұрын
Hi
@patrickbaum5053
@patrickbaum5053 10 ай бұрын
As a 62-year-old native (American) English speaker, I did not know the words eggcorn or squib! Thank you, Lucy.
@EnglishwithLucy
@EnglishwithLucy 10 ай бұрын
love that Patrick!!! thanks for sharing :)
@moideenshap6617
@moideenshap6617 10 ай бұрын
@@EnglishwithLucy what sup no.. please
@Alexa-ly8jy
@Alexa-ly8jy 10 ай бұрын
​@@EnglishwithLucyI got 100%
@MarilynLoveYou
@MarilynLoveYou 10 ай бұрын
That's comforting to know for someone like me who's been learning English for decades and still comes over something new. I had never heard of eggcorn either
@quirrel1453
@quirrel1453 10 ай бұрын
LMAO
@Nokturn6
@Nokturn6 10 ай бұрын
I'm not a native speaker and I feel these eggcorns apply mostly to native speakers, because they've learned the language by hearing. People learning the language from scratch read a lot more.
@kittysunlover
@kittysunlover 10 ай бұрын
Some native speakers learn a lot by reading, as well, at least for expanding vocabulary. So as a native speaker who was a bookworm (an avid reader) growing up, I did very well on this eggcorns quiz - but I would mispronounce words a lot as a child until I was eventually corrected. I still struggle to correctly pronounce some words, because I had only read them and the incorrect pronunciation that I made up in my head just stuck with me. :)
@Aetheraev
@Aetheraev 10 ай бұрын
​@kittysunlover, yeah, I misread the word lethargy when I first saw it and assumed it was legarthy. Since it never came up in conversation it was years before I realised my mistake
@kittysunlover
@kittysunlover 10 ай бұрын
@@Aetheraev I've definitely done that sort of thing before, too. :) At least it makes for a fun story to tell!
@jaysea142857
@jaysea142857 10 ай бұрын
Passing muster/cutting the mustard…
@sparking2016
@sparking2016 10 ай бұрын
@@Aetheraev I think a whole video on mispronounced words we've learned from reading would be interesting.
@ashby4211
@ashby4211 10 ай бұрын
I am a native speaker and I think it might be helpful to non native speakers (and native speakers alike) if you explain the reason those actual words were chosen for that particular expression as well as the meaning of it. For example a damp squib. A squib is a type of firework which if damp will not perform and therefore will be a disappointment. Likewise nipped in the bud - if you nip a bud off a flower it cannot bloom. Knowing the logic helps us remember. I enjoyed your quiz, to my shame I got buck naked wrong.
@rayhoward363
@rayhoward363 10 ай бұрын
I'm a 70-year old American male with a high school education. I have been ensconced in North Carolina (one of the most northern of the southern states of the southeast) since birth. I am proud to claim a final grade of 100% correct. Fun exercise and made me think a time or two. I admit to somewhat guessing correctly on the squid/squib usage. Thank you for your endeavours to mold our little minds of mush into a mountain of accurate knowledge.
@malvuux2366
@malvuux2366 9 ай бұрын
Congrats!☺
@jamaicacabulang9620
@jamaicacabulang9620 10 ай бұрын
When I was in primary school, I used the phrase "as a MOTHER of fact" at most of my homeworks and I thought it's right since no one corrected me. While reading our high school's newspaper, I discovered that it should be "as a MATTER of fact". English is not my mother tongue and I'm still learning the language, thanks a lot to podcasts, audio books, and your videos, Lucy.
@samira_ay3
@samira_ay3 10 ай бұрын
Just a quick note, the word 'homework' is typically used as an uncountable noun, so it's usually 'homework' instead of 'homeworks.😃
@jamaicacabulang9620
@jamaicacabulang9620 10 ай бұрын
@@samira_ay3 Oh thank you!
@l-SlimReaper-I
@l-SlimReaper-I 10 ай бұрын
@@jamaicacabulang9620Don’t worry man English is supposedly the hardest language to learn but you’re doing a great job! Props to you for challenging yourself and learning something new, keep it up!
@yourmum69_420
@yourmum69_420 10 ай бұрын
@@jamaicacabulang9620 mother and matter sound nothing alike though
@maddalena5708
@maddalena5708 10 ай бұрын
As a Mother of Fact this is genious and so funny!
@SethNaugler
@SethNaugler 10 ай бұрын
Hi Lucy. Fun video. I'm a native speaker, born and raised in the States and in my sixties. I scored a 100% but I had to guess on one of them: "wet squib". I've never heard that one. I looked it up in the Oxford Dictionary on my phone (love it) and also looked up "squib," which I couldn't remember but I know I've heard before. Hollywood uses squibs with little fake blood capsules to simulate bullet wounds (with lovely, flying blood!). This one is definitely more common on the British side of the pond. And I have another one for you: Is it "chomping at the bit" or "champing at the bit"? Tick, tick, tick. It's B! Champing at the bit. To chomp is to chew firmly and noisily, to champ is to be a horse and do pretty much the same thing. Only horses can champ, not my daughter. Most Americans misuse this one since the verb "to champ" is so esoteric and most of us don't have horses anymore, anyway. Thanks!
@peggyandjoshmast4902
@peggyandjoshmast4902 10 ай бұрын
100%
@jeffeloso
@jeffeloso 8 ай бұрын
I am a native speaker and I got them all right. Regarding Duck versus duct, Duck is a brand name of duct tape. This channel is always fascinating.
@67L48
@67L48 5 ай бұрын
Duck tape is more of a modegreen than an eggcorn, though. Duck tape would have a radically different meaning than duct tape.
@lorrielee885
@lorrielee885 9 ай бұрын
Native English speaker from Florida here. I got 100% right. I honestly have never heard of the "damp squib" but I guessed that was the right one. I've been enjoying your videos since I first found them last week. I was fascinated by videos with the comparison of British, Australian and America English.
@nestawhittmore8393
@nestawhittmore8393 10 ай бұрын
I'm a native (British) English speaker and I'm usually mesmerized by how much I learn from watching your videos, keep it up Lucy.
@fredfred2363
@fredfred2363 10 ай бұрын
Uh ha. Same here.
@danielsimonpratt
@danielsimonpratt 10 ай бұрын
Hi, Lucy, I'm a native British English speaker and teach English to students here in Spain. I have to say that I don't think I'd ever heard of eggcorn before, and, after researching its origin, it's quite interesting considering that it came from someone mishearing 'acorn' as 'eggcorn'! 😂😂 I was unsure whether it was a damp squid or squib, but logically it's squib. Coincidentally, a squib is a type of firework (also something I didn't know...yet!) Finally, pass muster was obviously the correct answer by elimination, but I don't think I've ever heard or read this expression. All I have used muster for is 'muster stations', especially as I used to travel on boats a lot when I was younger, and 'muster the courage to do something', like write a comment on here 😅 Your channel is very useful both for learners and teachers of English. Thanks for sharing your knowledge with us all 😊
@suzisaintjames
@suzisaintjames 10 ай бұрын
I think I first heard "muster" in a Shirley Temple movie where all the soldiers had to pass muster or inspection. 💖🌞🌵😷
@DeborahHMarks
@DeborahHMarks 10 ай бұрын
I was wondering if that's where it had come from.
@Imforeverenglish
@Imforeverenglish 10 ай бұрын
Muster parade was indeed a military inspection parade. Failing to achieve the required standard would often lead to a restriction of privileges such as not getting a weekend leave pass. Therefore to pass muster was to achieve the aim and it slightly predates Shirley Temple movies!
@tobiasware
@tobiasware 10 ай бұрын
I was about to type a comment about a squib being a small firework as we used to buy squibs to throw on Bonfire Night fifth of November way back in England in the 1960s. Being a firework, if it got damp the blackpowder would not ignite and explode at most it fizzled out, thus giving the meaning of the phrase "to be a damp squib".
@davfb8622
@davfb8622 10 ай бұрын
As a non native speaker, Harry Potter taught me about squib. But no I didn’t know it was a sort of fireworks lol
@barryschwarz
@barryschwarz 10 ай бұрын
I wonder if you might do a video on when to use toward/s, forward/s, backward/s etc, with and without the S. This is almost never taught in schools! 🙂
@clinthowe7629
@clinthowe7629 10 ай бұрын
I got them all right Lucy. these remind me of frequently misunderstood lyrics, called mondegreens, because of a woman named Sylvia Wright who misheard the lyric, “They have slain the earl O Moray and laid him on the green” as “Lady Mondegreen” She considered it much more romantic that the lady would die with her lover. 😂😂😂
@M4TCH3SM4L0N3
@M4TCH3SM4L0N3 10 ай бұрын
To further confuse matters: if something doesn't pass muster, you may also say that it doesn't cut the mustard!
@MsAjax409
@MsAjax409 10 ай бұрын
A derivative of the eggcorn "pass the mustard"?
@elisabethbauer7427
@elisabethbauer7427 10 ай бұрын
As a 65 years old German I found it very interesting, I had 5 wrong answers but at least feeling proud of myself , smile . Greetings to the UK
@derendathieke8947
@derendathieke8947 10 ай бұрын
What a fun video! 100% correct. As a 70+ year old, we probably heard these phrases used more frequently and learned the proper usage. But we also were not inundated with so many slang terms that we have to refer to an Urban dictionary to keep up with so many new terms and innuendo.
@prepper_nation_h
@prepper_nation_h 10 ай бұрын
Native English speaker here. I got them all correct, but I had such a good time going through your list with you! Laughter ensued, and it has been the highlight of my day thus far. Might I suggest you cover another eggcorn in a future episode? "Jury-rigged" vs. "jerry-rigged." As far as I know, "jury-rigged" is more correct and has earlier roots. Apparently, the term "jerry-rigged" has some historical use since WWII when English-speaking GIs referred to some of the German booby-traps and battlefield engineering contraptions they encountered, with "Jerry" being a common nickname for Germans. The word jerrycan comes from this usage as well, so it might be a case where either "jury-" or "jerry-rigged" has become acceptable in contemporary English.
@wesjackson7775
@wesjackson7775 10 ай бұрын
I am one of the native English (American) you referred to. I have been watching your channel for a couple of years now. I just love hearing you speak. I got all of them right but successfully guessed one of them correctly that I wasn't sure of. I took your level test and am at the C2 level.
@jc9716
@jc9716 10 ай бұрын
As a former adult educator concentrated in comunication, I'm interested in language. I'd never heard the term "eggcorn" before, even with a lifelong interest in communication and a master's in adult education! Thank you for adding to my vocabulary!
@jc9716
@jc9716 10 ай бұрын
PS I got them all.
@KerryKilpatrick616
@KerryKilpatrick616 10 ай бұрын
I am a native English speaker and find your information highly valuable. It's amazing how often we get sloppy with our language due to colloquialisms, malaprops or just laziness. What a great service you provide!! Much appreciated. I learn something new every time I listen to you!!
@astone3871
@astone3871 10 ай бұрын
As a native speaker of American English with parents that did their best to speak proper English, I only missed the one about the squib/ squid partly because I have never heard it before. I found your channel a couple of years ago just before your wedding. I was trying to improve my English skills to be able to proofread books / manuscripts at the beginning of the pandemic. I have decided that even though my spoken English is very good, my understanding of tenses, punctuation, and grammar is still terribly lacking. But I do keep finding myself hollering at newscasters( in my mind) “You used the wrong word!” “You pronounced that wrong.” And my favorite, “That doesn’t mean what you think it does!” I really enjoy listening to your voice as you try to teach everyone how to speak English properly.
@Willpower757
@Willpower757 10 ай бұрын
I didn't know and heard about eggcorns. But I got 9/15 right. Thank you my the best & intelligent teacher Lucy !!! You're an absolute star! Fabulous!!! 💛💖
@darralynemunro7350
@darralynemunro7350 10 ай бұрын
I am a native speaker. I got them all correct. The damp squib one, a squib is a type of firework hence the expression. If it get wet, it fizzles dismally. The other one people get wrong is chomping at the bit as opposed to champing at the bit. Chomping is obviously chewing, but champing means being restless and impatient
@cooledcannon
@cooledcannon 10 ай бұрын
This is one I got wrong anyways thought chomping
@StringerNews1
@StringerNews1 9 ай бұрын
Then there's the fact that a damp _squid_ is perfectly normal in the ocean where they live.
@naderm1708
@naderm1708 10 ай бұрын
Hi Lucy, I am not a native English speaker, but have been living in US for about 23 years now. I missed 5 out of 15 (scot, biding time, last-ditch, passing muster, damp squib). Some of them I hadn't even heard and some even didn't know the meaning of the word, like squib. very informative video. I love watching your videos. Thanks very much. 🌹
@bethlangford8632
@bethlangford8632 10 ай бұрын
Canadian here, so a similar language to my British friends, with some fun and interesting differences. As a trivia buff, the term eggcorn is new and delightful to me. Have any of you ever heard this one? Several years ago, while working in childcare, the large open room next to the Toddler Room was set up as an indoor gross motor space (climbers, riding toys, tumble mats). My coworker wrote on all of the children's daily notes to parents; "Your child had a lot of fun playing next store in the Gross Motor Room today". Seriously, an adult English-speaking educator of young children who thought "next door" was actually "next store" 😳
@kevincleek8389
@kevincleek8389 9 ай бұрын
Maybe sender was using word recognition software and neglecting to review the message before pressing the "humiliate me publicly" button.
@StarmaxStarmax-zn3xt
@StarmaxStarmax-zn3xt 9 ай бұрын
ROFL, well,, technically, the next store (for avid shoppers) is probably next door...
@fedem39
@fedem39 10 ай бұрын
I made 2 mistakes, but I can tell you that in some cases both phrases were unknown to me, and I chose the answer mainly by intuition. A quite challenging test for novice and I think also for an intermediate student . Very interesting though...Thank you Lucy!
@kevbishop12
@kevbishop12 10 ай бұрын
I’m an American English speaker who is fascinated with British English, that’s why I watch your videos, and today’s lesson was not a disappointment. I do watch a lot of British programming so “squib” wasn’t new to me but I had never heard of the saying that includes it so “damp squib” was new to me. I think I have heard it said but didn’t know the definition. Otherwise, I got them right. I particularly loved the mayo ketchup, speaking of condiments, very clever.
@EnglishwithLucy
@EnglishwithLucy 10 ай бұрын
Thanks so much Kevin 🥰 lovey comment! Its a pleasure to have you here!
@mehmettemel8725
@mehmettemel8725 10 ай бұрын
@@EnglishwithLucy Now Lucy is that correct or is it suppose to be "lovely"?🤔
@kentjensen4939
@kentjensen4939 10 ай бұрын
It's called fry sauce where I come from.
@tonyhunt8059
@tonyhunt8059 10 ай бұрын
Thanks, Lucy. I managed to get every one of these correct. Being a 75-year-old former grammar school pupil and university graduate (not with language degrees, just with a business emphasis), I enjoyed several of the "similarities" you introduced. I think I will visit your channel more...
@petersuozzo1227
@petersuozzo1227 9 ай бұрын
I concurrently learned English as a native language. This was great! Loved it! Thank you. This was entertaining.
@khaled_hossain
@khaled_hossain 10 ай бұрын
I scored 14/15. I got the "passing muster" wrong. Not to blow my own trumpet, but I think I did pretty well. Love from Bangladesh 🇧🇩
@Lightbeerer
@Lightbeerer 10 ай бұрын
Same score, same mistake, although I've lived in the UK for 17 years!
@MartinKuboschek
@MartinKuboschek 10 ай бұрын
Same score, but another fault in my case. I’m a German who never lived in the US or the UK … but one of my sons did so and that helped me, too, a lot to improve my English. Lucy, thank you for your interesting channel! Though this is only my 2nd clip here, I really appreciate it and clicked on the Follow button.
@sparking2016
@sparking2016 10 ай бұрын
I think you'll find it's "blow my own crumpet"
@Sherwoody
@Sherwoody 10 ай бұрын
I got 15/15. I’m Canadian with a mom that was born in the UK.
@gaglikabar
@gaglikabar 10 ай бұрын
@@Sherwoody I can speak Hungarian. What is your super power?
@missaisohee
@missaisohee 10 ай бұрын
i' watched RobWords' video about eggcorns just yesterday. great minds think alike!
@neissansaber8423
@neissansaber8423 9 ай бұрын
Your style of teaching makes learning fun
@lidiapekala8618
@lidiapekala8618 10 ай бұрын
You're simply amazing, Lucy! Thank you! ❤
@seab110
@seab110 10 ай бұрын
Native speaker here - got all except one. I grew up on British English and now speak a blend of British/American. What a coincidence; I actually just learned "eggcorn" last week from RobWords, who does the history lof English words.
@nct948
@nct948 10 ай бұрын
same here (having heard of eggcorns last week too, and of squib being a firework ) but not native. I have never heard the expression'a dime a dozen' but could work it out logically. I failed at no.6 as I had no idea what a scot was. Now I know it an ancient word for 'tax' so it makes sense.
@4evaavfc
@4evaavfc 10 ай бұрын
I had never heard of an eggcorn before. Thank you, Lucy.
@theonetruekirk
@theonetruekirk 10 ай бұрын
Hey Lucy, American (not 'merican) English speaker here. The only one I got wrong was damp squid/squib; I knew the phrase but had never seen it written out. Didn't know the term Eggcorn, so thanks for that. Here's another one: new lease/leash on life (lease is correct). Annoyingly, I hear this one a lot as leash.
@oscarburgos7774
@oscarburgos7774 9 ай бұрын
Hi Lucy, My favorite eggcorn to identify for people, one which I learned from you, is "You've got another thing coming," which is very frequently said by mistake instead of "You've got another think coming." By the way, I'm a native speaker of English, and I have thoroughly relished in your lessons for several years now.
@lucky6434
@lucky6434 10 ай бұрын
Hi, first and foremost, thx for all the videos! I am not a native and I think I made about 3 mistakes in this. I have to say though, I was quite uncertain in a few more cases. I once heard a British native speaker say something that sounded like "I can't be asked". I understood it as a variant of "I can't be bothered" as in "I just don't want to do something." Only later did I realize that what the person actually said was "I can't be arsed". At least, I understood the meaning correctly! :D
@andromacha83
@andromacha83 10 ай бұрын
I am not a native speaker, but I've been studying English as a second language since I was 5 (I am 40 now), and I am married to an American. I have to say that I made 2 mistakes, but it was because I was totally unfamiliar with a couple of terms, so I was just pretty much clueless as to their meaning. I must say that I caught more than once my father-in-law saying "for all intensive purposes" 😂😂 Love your channel, Lucy; I always learn some new things from you!
@dominicdudebromtl9380
@dominicdudebromtl9380 9 ай бұрын
American english is almost irrelevant outside of the USA. This is not an american teacher lol
@andromacha83
@andromacha83 9 ай бұрын
@dominicdudebromtl9380 excuse me, what? Why did you leave such a dumb comment to reply to me? I know she is not an American teacher, and to be fairly honest I don't even need a teacher. I just love her contents, and I left a comment as she asked us to. Go preach somewhere else, thank you very much!
@inscrutianaII
@inscrutianaII 9 ай бұрын
I work hard to suppress any facial twitching when I hear "intensive purposes". Stay strong.
@danielcox3152
@danielcox3152 10 ай бұрын
I am a Native English speaker. In the South of England. Love your channel Lucy
@TheMainManBD
@TheMainManBD 10 ай бұрын
This video is one of my personal favourites. More like this please and thank you.
@edithgruber2125
@edithgruber2125 10 ай бұрын
Advanced learner of English here (20+ years, I wrote my PhD thesis in English), I got 14/15. The only phrase I didn't know was 'damp squib' vs 'damp squid'. I always thought that squib was a word JK Rowling invented for her Harry Potter books. In that universe, it refers to someone born to a magical family without having magical powers themselves. It never occurred to me that she might have repurposed an existing word. Thank you for bringing that up in your quiz.
@willsoe1
@willsoe1 10 ай бұрын
I nailed them all. I wouldn’t have done so without the texting. Reading the texts helped a lot. I’m a Danish English teacher - I’m thrilled I passed this one 😂😂😂
@stinekn1
@stinekn1 9 ай бұрын
Same :)
@beckym3650
@beckym3650 10 ай бұрын
I’m a native English speaker (American) and never heard the word eggcorn. It’s very cool to learn that today. I missed for all intents and purposes. It does make more sense to say, I just never thought about it. I have never heard of damp squid or damp squib. Thanks for this, it’s my first time seeing your channel, how fun!
@arturomalpica3251
@arturomalpica3251 9 ай бұрын
As a Mexican man who doesn't speak English as a mother language I had only one mistake, number 10, which was really tricky since in Mexico we learn American English. I know that pronunciation can play trick on us and I try to do my best understanding the whole sentence or the meaning of what is being said. I studied English to become a teacher and of course at school they don't teach us this type of idioms or eggcorns. I feel so proud of myself because most of my learning was autodidact. I learned a lot with music, movies and reading and ultimately with social media texting with friends and all of what we have access to in this information at hand world we live in now. I love English since I was a little kid so learning was more fun than boring and I also love grammar. I have been following you on Instagram for quite some time and I have also love your lessons and the way you teach us English because it is fun to learn it. Thank you Lucy.
@sulagnaz
@sulagnaz 10 ай бұрын
13/15. It was such a fun exercise to test my knowledge, alongside I learnt something new. The scot free one was really nice. Loved it ❤
@user-mw6sg4xz9h
@user-mw6sg4xz9h 10 ай бұрын
Learnt?
@satyakibanerjee21888
@satyakibanerjee21888 10 ай бұрын
Biding my time & last ditch effort were two excellent eggcorns. The term itself was unknown to me. Thnx Lucy for endowing us with such enriched knowledge. I'll definitely use these phrases in daily conversations...
@spoede64
@spoede64 10 ай бұрын
Last ditch effort is related to the ditches or trenches in ww1. Sad enough
@helentee9863
@helentee9863 10 ай бұрын
I think bide/bideing is Scottish/Celtic. Meaning to rest/wait patiently One of those very of those very old words that have 'fallen out' of use, as l've seldom heard it spoken, only really coming across it in books. "Will you bide a wee (short) while ". 😁
@ARTbomben
@ARTbomben 9 ай бұрын
Looks like most of the comments is about what people can and cannot spell or read. Let me just take a moment to appreciate the time and effort you Lucy put into making videos for other to learn and become better at your native language :) Your a gem to listen to :) I'm a non-native so to learn more about the language and in another way than the teachers learned me close to 20 years ago is just lovely :)
@ericmg7563
@ericmg7563 10 ай бұрын
As a nonnative English speaker, I learned a lot and thank you a bunch for making my learning so much fun! Great job!
@cesarinocencio469
@cesarinocencio469 10 ай бұрын
I'm not a native speaker, but I got 14/15. That damp squib escaped me, although thanks to your video, I learned something new today. You've got the charm and charisma in presenting your video! I truly love and appreciate it! Looking forward to more learning experiences with your videos.
@Sluga7hor
@Sluga7hor 10 ай бұрын
you meant to say the damned squid escaped you?
@doctorngl
@doctorngl 10 ай бұрын
​@@Sluga7hor I remebered that from the show "The it crowd" haha, they were discussing about damp squib or damp squid.
@lysan1445
@lysan1445 10 ай бұрын
Surprisingly, I made no mistakes, but this may be due to not being a native speaker. We learned all the correct phrases in school, and everything else felt wrong. I had an outstanding English teacher who had grown up bilingual. He made learning English interesting and fun. I am in my sixties now. Fortunately, I had the opportunity to keep speaking English all my life, so I never got rusty. I love your lessons and use them to brush up on my English - or to happily confirm that I still got it right. My main problem is to keep British and American English apart as I have friends and colleagues on both sides of the pond.
@ramonalavigne8953
@ramonalavigne8953 10 ай бұрын
Your English is amazing! If you hadn't said anything I would have assumed you were a native speaker. I hope I can get my French up to your level of English.
@lysan1445
@lysan1445 10 ай бұрын
@@ramonalavigne8953 Thank you! You've made my day!
@RingsLoreMaster
@RingsLoreMaster 10 ай бұрын
@lysan, as to the two Englishes, you've naught to worry over. Thanks to Star Trek all of us know what a turbolift is so we can figure out what a lift is. Further, thanks to the world's most read mystery author we know any number of British words
@lysan1445
@lysan1445 10 ай бұрын
@@RingsLoreMaster 🤣🤣🤣I love Star Trek, too!
@Jshortcake79
@Jshortcake79 9 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed this one. Thank you
@In2disjecta
@In2disjecta 10 ай бұрын
Lucy I loved this lesson. I’m a trilingual speaker, and I this was brilliant. I’m in love with your pronunciation 😂
@karinst2367
@karinst2367 10 ай бұрын
I’ve got 11/15 right! This was a fun lecture…Hugs from Vienna! Thank you so much, dear Lucy! 😊
@brosama8722
@brosama8722 10 ай бұрын
Same result over here. Many greetings from Germany ✌🏽😊
@aekfet
@aekfet 10 ай бұрын
متميزة كالعادة
@h.sch.5717
@h.sch.5717 10 ай бұрын
Lucy, I love your British clean English so much! It is so much better than the mumbling sound of US English (gennleman, tidle, madder, proberdy, ...😅)!
@randydiviney4156
@randydiviney4156 10 ай бұрын
I am native eng. speaker and ive warched your videos many times. Great fun
@michael.a.covington
@michael.a.covington 10 ай бұрын
"Duct tape" is an interesting one. It was originally "duck tape" (made of cotton duck cloth) long before there were air-conditioner ducts -- and the tape actually used on ducts is metallic -- but the gray cloth tape is predominantly called "duct tape" at least in the USA.
@Me-xo5tw
@Me-xo5tw 10 ай бұрын
😱
@mehmettemel8725
@mehmettemel8725 10 ай бұрын
How funny,I always thought the correct name was "duct tape" only to found out not long ago that it was called "duck tape".
@fclefjefff4041
@fclefjefff4041 10 ай бұрын
@@mehmettemel8725 It isn't called "duck tape." There's a brand of duct tape called Duck Tape.
@MsAjax409
@MsAjax409 10 ай бұрын
Yes. It was invented by J&J for the military as a waterproof tape that soldiers called "duck tape".
@seanwilliams913
@seanwilliams913 10 ай бұрын
Hi Lucy ma'am, I got four wrong answers to the eggcorn sentences but I am improving. I was actually quite nervous doing it. Thank you for the interactive lessons again. It's a pleasure to learn English this way. Your presentation and creativity is fantastic.😊
@ppfeffer1
@ppfeffer1 10 ай бұрын
Great video! I got 12 out of 15. I am now a lot more confident to use the eggcorns in a sentence. Thank you, Lucy!
@user-kh5np8cj2u
@user-kh5np8cj2u 9 ай бұрын
I am a native English speaker. I grew up in Los Angeles California and my mother was an English teacher. I moved to South Texas and worked at a prison for 28 years often enjoying the comically mispronounced idioms and phrases. Loved your video
@attilanagy3033
@attilanagy3033 10 ай бұрын
Great video, as always! Talking about eggcorns, I'd like to mention something which fellow English learners and even English native speakers may find interesting. So, I have an American friend who hails from the state of Massachusetts, and in the past I noticed that every time we talked about topics such as driving, traffic, directions, etc., he would say 'bang a Louie' to mean 'turn left', and 'bang a Ralph' to mean 'turn right'. Before meeting this friend, I'd never encountered either of these expressions, so I thought that aside from being idiomatic, these were also rather colloquial. Later on, as I was getting more exposure from American English, I heard both expressions every now and then, but I also noticed that 'hang a Louie' and 'hang a Ralph' were slightly more common than the 'bang' variants. After reading a few dictionary entries and articles about these idioms, it seems to me the 'hang' variants may be a bit more standard, with the verb 'hang' meaning something like 'take' in this context. However, my Bay Stater ('Massachusettsan') friend swears that he and many people in the area where he's spent most of his life use the 'bang' variants.
@m444ss
@m444ss 10 ай бұрын
I'm a native speaker, and I always have a lovely time watching your videos.
@SandiDutoit-ty8nz
@SandiDutoit-ty8nz 9 ай бұрын
I’m a South African native English speaker. Happy to say I got them all right, but can honestly say say that the term “eggcorn” is a new one for me. Thanks!
@sawomirj3384
@sawomirj3384 10 ай бұрын
Thanks Lucy, I kept watching even though I am a native speaker and I did enjoy it immensely!
@tjthill
@tjthill 9 ай бұрын
Native speaker, knew them all, was actually hanging on for duck tape / duct tape which I only learned in my 50's really is "duck tape", because duck is a kind of canvas, it was the original cloth backing for the adhesive. Wikipedia: "Duck tape" is recorded in the Oxford English Dictionary as having been in use since 1899[2] and "duct tape" (described as "perhaps an alteration of earlier duck tape") since 1965. Doing more reading now I see the "correct" term has pretty much shifted in the fifty-plus years since, so I can understand why it's not in the video and I don't feel cheated any more :-) Thanks for the flawless delivery.
@Josephsol55
@Josephsol55 10 ай бұрын
Her teaching style is amazing 👍👍👍
@kristiholbrook506
@kristiholbrook506 9 ай бұрын
I'm native English and there were a few I've been saying wrong. Thanks for letting me know 😊😊😊
@EelkodeVos
@EelkodeVos 10 ай бұрын
Being Dutch with English as a second language I scored a 13 out of 15. Not too bad, I suppose. The two I was wrong about were the ones I hadn't heard before. "Flesh out" or "flush out". And as a kid of about eight I had picked up "a diamond dozen" - so when I saw the correct version a moment ago I immediately giggled because I realised I had stored this expression incorrectly in my memory so long ago. So I learned a few new expressions - thanks, Lucy! Your radiating energy and love for language is inspiring!🍀
@viniciusgmachado1204
@viniciusgmachado1204 10 ай бұрын
@EnglishwithLucy I got ‘em all right! Many, like “dog-eat-dog,” I’d learned as a little kid. Others, like “damp squib,” I’d learned recently from another video about eggcorns by RobWords. However, some, like “passing muster,” I’d never heard before until today; conversely, I knew that last one was right anyway because “passing _mustard”_ sounded utterly ridiculous. Here’s another: “one fell swoop,” apparently commonly mistaken as “one _fowl_ swoop.”
@VirginiaFeuRosa
@VirginiaFeuRosa 10 ай бұрын
Not native, but I did get A on my Cambridge Proficiency exam :) I only got "last-ditch effort" wrong. Love your videos! I haven't lived in England (or any other English speaking country) in over 30 years, so I'm not as fluent as I would like. I always find your videos really interesting! No wonder you have nearly 10mi subscribers! Well done and thanks!!
@Havok632
@Havok632 10 ай бұрын
Thanks Lucy for correcting these! I took so many of them for granite.
@jenniferlynn3537
@jenniferlynn3537 10 ай бұрын
Lucy, you’re such a great joy to listen to and learn from. Alas, I’m a native English speaker. If only I knew of a French version of you! 🇫🇷👱🏻‍♀️🗣
@jean-lucjourdan7227
@jean-lucjourdan7227 10 ай бұрын
Proud 😌 to announce a 100% score but not without choosing / guessing the logical one in two instances (native French speaker).
@alexrafe2590
@alexrafe2590 10 ай бұрын
Being a pedantic American editor helped me get them all correct. Although, like another American viewer of this video, I had never heard of the term eggcorn until I heard about it on KZbin. In the other viewer’s case I think he heard it from you Lucy. But in my case it was from another Brit with a KZbin channel who decided to cover the same topic which I watched some days ago. His channel deals with lots of curiosities associated with English and I think it’s called RobWords. You both caught my attention with the expression ‘Butt Naked’, which I increasingly heard from British writers and speakers when I moved to England. In fact I don’t think I had ever heard anyone us the expression in that format butt naked until I came here.
@stcoxen3750
@stcoxen3750 10 ай бұрын
Hi Lucy, As a native British speaker these posed no trouble. I enjoy your channel as language fascinates me and I am always intrigued by the etymology of words and phrases. I think that one learns the version of a phrase one heard (or mis-heard) first... my Londoner partner always called a deaf person 'mutton' and it took me a long time to discover he was using the Cockney rhyming slang of "Mutt and Jeff" or "Mutt'n". A new eggcorn for me! I was unaware of the term eggcorn, having always used malapropism in the past, especially as with my west-country burr, eggcorn and acorn sound incredibly different! Of course, once one has learned the correction, it is tempting to continue to use the incorrect form for effect... as children we took delight in singing the hymn "Lord of the Dance, settee" and now I would always deliberately (mis)quote "sufficient to the day is the weevil thereof" and everyone I know would always "cast nasturtiums" as it conjures such a marvellous image!
@Peter0wen
@Peter0wen 10 ай бұрын
As a native English speaker I found your lesson very amusing. It reminded me of some of the sketches by The late two Ronnies. In particular the one when Ronny Corbett takes a blackberry back to the shop to complain about it not working. I’m also interested to know what your take is on using ‘bring’ instead of ‘take’ (as in the above sentence.)
@sandrasimark5088
@sandrasimark5088 10 ай бұрын
As non native English speaker (Swede) I found this easy, 15/15 correct and most of them anticipated before alternatives shown.
@TABLESAWTIM
@TABLESAWTIM 10 ай бұрын
100%- Greetings Lucy. When I was 5yo in Parkersburg, West Virginia, USA, my mother worked to remove all of our Hill Billy accent because we were moving from The East, to California for my father's work. I learned how to say things clearly from a young age. That has continued throughout my life, age 58yo, and I'm not a gramer-nazi, although incorrect speech can (grate on my nerves). I live in Bakersfield, California, and have been surrounded by "Dust Bowl Okies". Incorrect speakers as a rule.
@marvinwilliams52
@marvinwilliams52 9 ай бұрын
As a 61 year old English speaker I got them all EXCEPT “buck naked”. Even at this age you never stop learning. Really enjoyed this. 🎉🎉
@AgozikVedatMiller-kh1jo
@AgozikVedatMiller-kh1jo 10 ай бұрын
I am not a native speaker but I have got my CAR certificate and I have scored 13 out of 15. This is the first time I have come across the word egg corn. Thank you Lucy.
@oneobserver6116
@oneobserver6116 10 ай бұрын
8:03 EST. I got all 15 correct. One eggcorn that I hear sometimes is" You've got another thing coming " when it should be" You've got another think coming ".
@claudiarodari5577
@claudiarodari5577 10 ай бұрын
Hi!!! Not a native-speaker, studied many years as a teen and lived in New York two years a long long time ago. From that time on, mostly reading and tv/ cinema shows, but these eggcorns (didn't know the term!😂) were familiar in my brain.. Only 2 I didn't get! Happy❤ and I really enjoyed this class🎉 Keep on, Lucy!
@shashakids6854
@shashakids6854 10 ай бұрын
12/15. Thank you so much for your lessons Lucy.
@allucs
@allucs 10 ай бұрын
Hey Lucy, I literally love British english! And realised the first time I spoke english I sounded British, that was when I moved to Bali I met lots of people outside Indonesia.
@markdonovan1540
@markdonovan1540 10 ай бұрын
Score: 14/15 Firstly, as a native English speaker from London, I'd never heard of the word eggcorns before, but at least I knew most of the correct expressions. I'd never heard of "buck naked" before, so I'm going to continue to say it as "butt naked" because it sounds better! "Passing muster" is a new one for me. I've heard of "not cutting the mustard" = not meeting expectations of the required standard.
@chengifoo7603
@chengifoo7603 10 ай бұрын
Just finished watching your video - so entertaining and hilarious at times ( escaped goat!!! ) so thank you so much. Had fun doing it and learning two new phrases like "passing muster" and "damp squib". Only mistake is "flesh out" where I chose 'flush out" thinking it was to get the characters 'flushed' out to make them more 'alive' 🙂My common eggcorn confusion is "utmost" and " upmost".
@tomowen4491
@tomowen4491 10 ай бұрын
Well sweet, beautiful Lucy; It is somewhat difficult to not get arrogant, but I got 15 out of 15 correct. I give credit to my dear mother who was flawless in her use of english. Guess I will give some praise and thank to the LORD that He helped me learn so much from my Mom (no Mum). Thanks, and God bless you.
@jeb732008
@jeb732008 9 ай бұрын
I am a native speaker, with BA in English Literature and a Law degree, but I have never heard "damp squib" so there is always something we can learn.
@HROM1908
@HROM1908 10 ай бұрын
I, too, had never heard of eggcorn. Always delighted to learn. When very young I heard "In the name of the father etc. and in to the hole he goes". When corrected, I was so confused !
@Gracefull-ok9lr
@Gracefull-ok9lr 2 ай бұрын
I've been benefiting with your wonderful lessons. Your real admirer from Ethiopia, Africa!❤️💚❤
@TuanPham-ki3dy
@TuanPham-ki3dy 9 ай бұрын
Thank you Lucy
@digiclectic807
@digiclectic807 9 ай бұрын
American here. We don't use the damp squib expression here, but got the others. You should explain where these expressions came from. Would help to remember them.
@tanyatiwari1467
@tanyatiwari1467 10 ай бұрын
Hey Lucy !! i didn't know many of them , so got to learn many of them through this video lesson , thankyou so much for this beautiful lesson got to learn so many things in just one video lots of love from India to you💜💕
@jeffeloso
@jeffeloso 8 ай бұрын
Please do something on "I will be doing" and "I am going to do".
@BillCoale
@BillCoale 10 ай бұрын
(American) English native speaker here. Although I got them all right, I had to guess at the squib/sqid one. I think I've only heard that expression once or twice on British TV shows or videos and didn't know what the word squib meant. (but I do now, thanks!) I used butt naked and buck naked interchangeably for years, never knowing which was correct, and finally looked it up at some point. Nipped in the bud is one I happened to learn very young. It might be helpful if you know it comes from pruning plants. If you see a new sprout/leaf (a bud) heading in the wrong direction, you nip (cut) it before it becomes bigger and more difficult to change. And to all you English learners: you deserve every ego boost you get. I have the utmost respect for anyone learning a second language--especially if it's English.
@stephenalexander3723
@stephenalexander3723 10 ай бұрын
Ok I’m a native English speaker and I got ever eggcorn correct however in all fairness I did guess on one of them, that being said what I found more interesting is more biblical in that if our ministers pastors priest etc were not taught the Bible correctly they in turn cannot teach us properly therefore we need the Holy Spirit to guide us especially through these disconcerting times, we need to read and understand our Bibles better, that being said I wish I could’ve used another eggcorn in my comment but I haven’t given it much thought, I will say you make learning English a whole lot more fun and entertaining than my teachers ever did. Keep up the good work Lucy
@richardlepreux8489
@richardlepreux8489 10 ай бұрын
Multilingual person here. I have heard native American English speakers say, "Chester drawer" when referring to a chest of drawers. I have also heard people say, "train of thought" or "chain of thought", which both make sense, but I believe the correct phrase is, "trend of thought." By the way, I only missed one of your questions. But then, I've read the entire dictionary, which was tedious, but it really helped me learn English.
@jackhayden3953
@jackhayden3953 9 ай бұрын
Correct phrase is train of thought ...
@richardlepreux8489
@richardlepreux8489 9 ай бұрын
@@jackhayden3953 Trend of thought. Check your etymology before stating an opinion as fact.
@jsl1952
@jsl1952 10 ай бұрын
missed 2, I am not exactly a student, I started learning the language 58 or so years ago; my first teacher demanded proper pronunciation and forbade slurring (twenty, not twenny), to this day I keep my T's crisp and clear; but every day I learn and make an effort to improve since English is not my first language.
@PegR38
@PegR38 9 ай бұрын
I'm a native speaker and love grammar and spelling. I got them all right and learned a new one. I'd never heard damp squib before, but it just made a lot more sense than squid.
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