Very useful for an non English man to learn more about English. But would you please put all the new words on screen. So people can screen short the new words.?
Geez. Being a little hostile for such a harmless video, aren’t you? As for the terms you might be railing against, nibling and pibling are relatively novel, constructed words, that take the last 5 letters from sibling and add the start of n, for niece or nephew or p for the sibling of one’s parents. BUT we already have such words?!! I can hear you say. Unlike many languages, we do not have a collective name for the class being referred to. We have the noun “children” for the collective and gender unspecified for the parent’s offspring. We don’t ask “Do you have one or more sons and/or daughters?“ Yet English has failed us with a collective noun for the children on a parent‘s siblings, as well as the siblings as well. This has been remarked upon by linguists in particular, and the literate in general. The illiterate I suppose call as illiterate those people who surface solutions to this well known Immission. We aren’t the only European language with these omissions (eg French doesn’t even have a word for Siblings). The German word for Sibling is Geschwister. German does have its issues, but it’s remarkable capable of making words on the fly that make perfect sense when you examine their components.The children of one’s siblings belong to the class that many are pushing to be called Nibling. In German, we take the root for sibling and add the German word for child, or kind (as in the famed Kindergarten, or kind plus garden). So Geschwisterkind is the gender-unspecified, collective noun denoting the children by your siblings, or your nieces of nephews. The German, gender unspecified collective noun for parent is Eltern. So if we append it to the word for sibling we get Elterngeschwister, and that means the siblings of one’s parents . puts the word for parent before the word for sibling. Your Elterngeschwister is the word for your parents siblings, or your aunts and uncles. Snd Getman can go the other way, providing a separate word for male or female cousins along with its gender unspecified collective class name. These features just give a language more flexibility to allow for abstraction and generalizations or specification if you need to do that.
“Nibblings” (for nephew/niece) and “piblings” (for uncle/aunt( I actually not - or not yet - part of standard English. Standard English, regrettably, actually has no term that means both “nephew” and “niece,” and no term that means both “uncle” and “aunt”- even though we do indeed have the useful term “sibling” that means both “brother”” sister.” Perhaps this will change, but (at present) using “nibblings/piblings“ and some of the other non-standard English “general knowledge”information that I’ve seen in your presentations is a good way to fail any English exam that is being read and evaluated by a native speaker of English. These terms are very, very far from being general knowledge, indeed!
In reality no English person says nibbling or pibling so there is no point learning these words. In England we would say mum not mom and more usually granddad not grandpa
Before you want to become an English Teacher online your English pronunciation must be clear, Your English pronunciation is not good enough to become an Teacher online you need to learn more and more English to improve your English pronunciation
Thank you so much very usefull for us,❤
THANK YOU SO MUCH
Very useful for an non English man to learn more about English. But would you please put all the new words on screen. So people can screen short the new words.?
Question no 14 what is called the wife answer is wifey
What English is this?
It's not English
Question no 11 what is called grandmother answer is grandma
सवाल नंबर 8 मां किसे कहते हैं जवाब है मां
Q 14 should be called WiFi?
प्रश्न संख्या 9 पिता किसे कहते हैं उत्तर है पिता
सवाल नंबर 6 भतीजा-भतीजी किसे कहते हैं, जवाब है निबलिंग
सवाल नंबर 5 भाई-बहन किसे कहते हैं, जवाब है भाई-बहन
प्रश्न संख्या 3 पिता और माता किसे कहते हैं उत्तर है माता-पिता
सवाल नंबर 12 भाई किसे कहते हैं जवाब है भाई
प्रश्न क्रमांक 13 पति किसे कहते हैं उत्तर पति को
दादा-दादी किसे कहते हैं उत्तर है दादा-दादी
प्रश्न क्रमांक 10 दादाजी किसे कहते हैं उत्तर है दादाजी
प्रश्न क्रमांक 12 बहन किसे कहते हैं उत्तर है बहन
सवाल नंबर 7 अंकल और आंटी किसे कहते हैं? उत्तर है पिबलिंग
Get your questions right! What is money called..........?
Please. Improve your pronunciation
This went well 3 wrong
My dear madam. I have a great doubt. What do you mean by "what is called"?
Study the language before teaching others!!!!!.... your questions are illiterate. Awfull
Geez. Being a little hostile for such a harmless video, aren’t you?
As for the terms you might be railing against, nibling and pibling are relatively novel, constructed words, that take the last 5 letters from sibling and add the start of n, for niece or nephew or p for the sibling of one’s parents.
BUT we already have such words?!! I can hear you say.
Unlike many languages, we do not have a collective name for the class being referred to. We have the noun “children” for the collective and gender unspecified for the parent’s offspring. We don’t ask “Do you have one or more sons and/or daughters?“
Yet English has failed us with a collective noun for the children on a parent‘s siblings, as well as the siblings as well. This has been remarked upon by linguists in particular, and the literate in general. The illiterate I suppose call as illiterate those people who surface solutions to this well known Immission. We aren’t the only European language with these omissions (eg French doesn’t even have a word for Siblings).
The German word for Sibling is Geschwister. German does have its issues, but it’s remarkable capable of making words on the fly that make perfect sense when you examine their components.The children of one’s siblings belong to the class that many are pushing to be called Nibling. In German, we take the root for sibling and add the German word for child, or kind (as in the famed Kindergarten, or kind plus garden). So Geschwisterkind is the gender-unspecified, collective noun denoting the children by your siblings, or your nieces of nephews.
The German, gender unspecified collective noun for parent is Eltern. So if we append it to the word for sibling we get Elterngeschwister, and that means the siblings of one’s parents . puts the word for parent before the word for sibling. Your Elterngeschwister is the word for your parents siblings, or your aunts and uncles. Snd Getman can go the other way, providing a separate word for male or female cousins along with its gender unspecified collective class name.
These features just give a language more flexibility to allow for abstraction and generalizations or specification if you need to do that.
😊😊😊@@boxsterman77
What is called makers of such materials in Russia? Answer is Инфоцыгане (informational Gypsies)
“Nibblings” (for nephew/niece) and “piblings” (for uncle/aunt( I actually not - or not yet - part of standard English. Standard English, regrettably, actually has no term that means both “nephew” and “niece,” and no term that means both “uncle” and “aunt”- even though we do indeed have the useful term “sibling” that means both “brother”” sister.” Perhaps this will change, but (at present) using “nibblings/piblings“ and some of the other non-standard English “general knowledge”information that I’ve seen in your presentations is a good way to fail any English exam that is being read and evaluated by a native speaker of English. These terms are very, very far from being general knowledge, indeed!
Not worth it
LEARN YOUR GRAMMAR FIRST BEFORE YOU TEACH....
In reality no English person says nibbling or pibling so there is no point learning these words. In England we would say mum not mom and more usually granddad not grandpa
प्रश्न संख्या 4 बेटी और बेटा किसे कहते हैं उत्तर है संतान
Worst
Before you want to become an English Teacher online your English pronunciation must be clear, Your English pronunciation is not good enough to become an Teacher online you need to learn more and more English to improve your English pronunciation
I don’t think she intends to be a teacher. She knows something, and she simply wants to pass it on. If you don’t like it, just move on.
@@murtadah6327 If you dislike it just move on to where? It's not your business to reply to me leave me alone
Nice ❤️