I would say I learned most of this in grades 6-7. Maybe learned some of the music/arts just to be that one asshole kid that would brag to others about how much useless knowledge I knew.
matrixphijr Sorry you’re not funny and have to rely on the most basic comment format to crack a joke. Everyone watched the same video and no one cares if you’re humanly capable of repeating exactly what he said.
To be honest, I didn't learn any of these things in 5th grade and that's why I've never understood why its called "Are you smarter than a 5th grader?" first time I saw it I was in 5th or 6th grade and didn't know any of the answers, Either my school was bad or this show is just BS.
Apparently people are dropping the current groups of instruments, so it is no longer percussion, brass, string, and woodwind, but now idiophone, membranophone, aerophone, and chordophone. It is unnecessarily complicated, when the new ones are just the old ones with new names.
@@Jack_H179 Really your just gonna put a plain ? awww what’s the matter you can’t type correctly without making a error because you don’t know what to say when I was right about previous reply? 🤔
Toad wii remote with a Wii motion plus Toad wii remote with a Wii motion plus Toad wii remote with a Wii motion plus insideToad wii remote with a Wii motion plus Toad wii remote with a Wii motion plus insideToad wii remote with a Wii motion plus Toad wii remote with a Wii motion plus inside
@@melaneychuroy9187 if Valentine’s Day is an adjective like we both agreed on, then the four nouns in this sentence would be “you”, “card”, “child”, and “class”. How did you get 5?
@@kareemsaidoun1754 I thought "Valentine's Day" would be a noun because it's a holiday which is a thing. I had to read the sentence a few times to get to 5 nouns though
@@ruesylvester yeah I was wrong. Even though the noun is being used as an adjective, it is still considered a noun. Apparently it’s called an “Attributive noun” when that happens. Learned something new today.
*The game* : “If both clock hands are on the 6 what time is it?” *Actual show* : “What is the speed of light in a vacuum, divided by Pi, then multiplied by the number of hairs on a rhodesian ridgebacks taint?”
Mozart: *one of the most famous composers of all time, is a household name to this day* Poof: did music even exist in the 1780s? Mozart: Am I a joke to you?
13:40 They are claiming valentine's day is a noun, however it is a noun that operates as an adjective that modifies card in this sentence, this game is wrong again.
wellllll an adjective is just a word that describes or modifies a noun and “valentine’s day” was describing the type of card, so he’s kinda right. just like how in the phrase “day spa” day is an adjective modifying the type of spa.
Jimmie Jam "An adjective is a word that describes a noun", meaning that it expresses (read as "it is") a quality or a state of something. "Day" is not a quality, it's a thing, so it's a noun. The role a word has in the sentence doesn't change what that word is. Saying day is an adjective there would be like saying that in sentences like "The girl's dog" or "This object is shaped like a triangle", girl and triangle are adjectives. They aren't, they're nouns
PleaseEnterAName: sorry if i was unclear-what i meant was that in the example “day spa”, the word “day” IS a noun but is FUNCTIONING as an adjective because it specifies the type of spa. similarly to how “valentine’s day” functions in the phrase “valentine’s day card”.
Jimmie Jam The function a word has in a sentence doesn't change what part of speech that word is. Again, an adjective IS a quality or a state of something, and day is neither. What you're referring to, talking about "function", is the syntax of the sentence, which is not what was being asked. The part of a sentence that has the function of describing something is called attribute, and it can be an adjective as much as a noun. The function a word has doesn't tell you what that word is, that's why there are two distinct branches of grammar, syntax and morphology
@@gavyntapp7689 it's not the word chordaphone as a whole, it's the fact that it has the word chord in it. Aerophone has aero- which relates to air, and membranophone has the word "membrane" in it, which drums and many other percussion instruments have. The idiophone one would make sense to be confused over, but it's a process of elimination.
Just in case anyone wants to know, for the 5th grade math question all you need to do it add the digits of the number together (for instance if it’s 132 do 1+3+2) and if that new number is 9 or a multiple of 9, the original number is divisible by 9. I don’t blame poof for not remembering this from elementary school since it probably didn’t come up after elementary school. I just know it because I’m a math junkie :)
@@JustJsStudio First off: it's "depending", not "desponding". Second: A noun stays a noun, putting it behind another word doesn't change its meaning. Checkmate.
@@JustJsStudio you distract from the topic at hand, meaning you admit defeat. Also, I can't spend all day teaching basic language to a 5 year-old, so goodbye.
3:46 Technically the game is wrong here; no analog clock in the world can have both the minute hand and the hour hand pointing at any number besides 12 at the same time. For the time to be 6:30 the minute hand would be pointing at the 6 while the hour hand would actually be pointing between the 6 and the 7.
@@Supanoobman I know this was like a whole year ago lol but a noun can act like an adjective in that way, but it’s still a noun. I’m pretty sure it’s called a noun adjunct