Eh, the confusion probably comes from Kiara's accent and emphasis on to. I would maybe suggest she used "thru" instead, but we also know Kiara has issue pronouncing the "th" sound. not to mention more confusion as this word sounds similar to "threw." I wonder how long till we have Kiara regret learning English.
It's actually pretty difficult if you don't already know what she's trying to say because as a non-native speaker Kiara misses the emphasis on the 'to' that people subconsciously expect. Try saying 'one to six' and then 'one, two, six' and you'll notice that in the first you probably said 'to' more like 'tuh' than 'two'
So, " have you ever been to europe" "W H A T?!?!?!" was not a fluke... this is pure gold... You are practically a national treasure, don't ever change!
Kiara is the one that was wrong in Gura's case, not Gura. In order to use the word "to" in a range you must proceed it with "from". She did so with Kobo but not with Gura.
@@NoticemeSinPi nah, there no such rule. You should get it by context. Japanese language have way more of these different word same pronunciation stuff, but no one really confused
@@IceX92 you are wrong, "to" can be used to indicate intermediate or last elements points in a series, however in order to be grammatically correct there must be a word indicating the start point of said series. Without using a word to indicate the start of a series the statement Kiara made was either: "the grades: one, two, six" which is how Gura interpreted it, or "the grades one to six" which would mean the first grade is one and the following grade is six to - preposition 5 -used as a function word (1) to indicate the extent or degree (as of completeness or accuracy) or the extent and result (as of an action or a condition) (2) to indicate the last or an intermediate point of a series from - preposition 1 a-used as a function word to indicate a starting point of a physical movement or a starting point in measuring or reckoning or in a statement of limits
@@NoticemeSinPi Bro, you're in the VAST minority on that one. I guarantee you 90 percent of English speakers would just say grades 1 to 6. In fact, I've heard almost exactly that my whole life when people reference school grades. Fluent and native English speakers aren't going to pull out a bunch of Harvard books to have a casual conversation. Especially when these kinds of simple misunderstandings are often funny.
To be fair, kiara does pronounce "to" a bit weirdly. Someone who isnt as accustomed to the language may actually be at an advantage because they are used to hearing words slightly off Kinda like how Coco used to use worse english pronounciation to communicate better with others
To this day I'll never know if Gura was intentionally aiming for a joke, it missed, so she elaborated on the joke (double down not explain) and Kiara was just hurt so Gura ran with it. Or if Gura just had one of those moments, or Gura and numbers are just a bad match.
It's actually a bit of all of those. Kiara had been giving complete lists all stream, like she had just listed "1, 2, 3, 4, 5" for how they grade work, so Gura heard the "1 to. . ." as "1, 2,. . ." and started to voice her question before brain could use context to correct but she sticks to the bit. You can actually hear that she uses a different tone to ask this question compared to any of her earlier questions, as if she's mocking herself and the stupid questions kids tend to ask.
Australian here. We have Primary School and High School. Primary school is Kindergarten (5-6yr/o) and Years 1-6. Not 1-5 as Kiara Described. High School is Years 7 to 12.
lol i see why she got confused … it tricked me too xd im not used to hearing “to” correctly pronounced in situations like this.. i usually just here “tuh” so hearing kiara say it correctly got me too lol. maybe it’s a bilingual moment for her ?
@@winterkai3333 it works both ways, the whole point of my comment is to say there is another way to say it, therefore it would probably help to clarify.
That's what I am thinking. IIRC, Spanish doesn't have a distinct word for through, instead using "para" which also means for. I wonder if German has a similar issue.
correctly it should be ... from 1 to 5. I think that's ok, that gura had mistaken with the meaning because she got the words literally without back thinking.
By grades do they mean like years in school? because in australia when you start primary school you stay grade 1 to grade 6 and after, in high school it’s grade 7-12
Honestly this explains her fallout new vegas stream where she was like picking up every single junk item then selling her ammo cases (which are worth like nothing) and used a shovel the entire playthrough despite getting actual weapons LOL. Gura is precious xd
what?? man that sounds freaky.. so is 0 the best or worst? and 7 man i only know 1-6 as a german. well one school gave points from 0 - 15 (but you could still use the 6 - 1 for that)
@@fabi3790 it's not points in Australia it's years you start in year one then each year go up, so year 2 then next year 3 till 6 after 6 you go to highschool where it's 7 to 12
@@damongilmore4804 is that called grade? I though grade means the result of a test Like I have full points I have grade 1 Or did I thought of the wrong use of the word
@@fabi3790 well the school system here works on years and it's pretty much u go up at the end of each year and even if you get the best marks on all ur tests and assessments you won't move up untill the next year, they do in highschool usually have year 7 but in that year 7 there will be like year 7 math 7.1 and that year 7 has a top class and a middle class and bottom class depending on how big the year is
Bro Australia has kindergarten to 6 in primary and 7 to 12 in high school then you go to university. Is she really Australian like bro Edit: kindergarten is a seperate grade from 1
Water can contain a shark thereby storing its knowledge but it does not only hold sharks and thus xan comprehend more knowledge than a shark can even hold