"To spell Santa's name is easy to do, You write S-A-N-T & another A too, But no L, no L, Santa's name has no L, And he won't be too pleased if you don't learn to spell." ~Animaniacs
There are different varieties, I think. I grow one with small, yellow fruit, and I've seen others in my neighbourhood with small, red fruit. I'm fairly certain that feijoas, which are very popular here in New Zealand, are at least related to guava, and they remain green when ripe.
As someone who's visited the Philippines many times, I was thinking "They just call them bananas". But such is the nature of Sandy that I immediately assume I must be wrong and have hallucinated my entire life story.
They either asked a second gen that doesn't know the language or a Filipino that didn't care and said banana so whomever was asking the question would leave them alone lol.
maybe because we’re bilingual and still call them bananas, “saging” is just the translation to Filipino? also most likely because they can’t speak any Filipino dialects haha
Brittany Richards Well depends where your from or the variety, for me Guavas are yellow when they are fully ripe, but I’ve noticed different colors as well.
Am I the only one who immediately thought of Papaya before clicking on the video? Edit: is Paw Paw another term for Papaya in some countries? Paw paw is an actual fruit seperate from papayas here in America.
Lillikoi (Passiflora edulis forma flavicarpa) is a fully distinct variant of passionfruit (Passiflora edulis) , and is named/sold accordingly. It's same the same situation as with (say) cantaloupe and honeydew melon, both of which are variants of the same species (Cucumis melo), but are sold as distinct varieties.
Working against Josh here: Nuns & Sisters both use the title "Sister" when addressed, which is almost certainly the reason most people don't know there's a difference.
In the Low Countries there also used to be Beguines, a kind of half-nun. Women that either lost their husband to war or famine or disease, or women that didn't want to get married (with a man) but still retain some economic independence. They did not take formal vows. They had little communities, today they feel small village squares tucked away in cities.
The full prompt in the video states that the fruit is grown specifically in the Caribbean and Central America, which is... kinda on the opposite side of the world from where yuzu is cultivated 🤔
I knew about the sisterhood vow being different than the vows full-on nuns take. Only answer I've ever gotten right on this show. Think I'll need a lie down and a shower for it
@@IneffaWolf in Spanish, the definitions for "lemon" and "lime" don't exactly align with the English ones. Also, notably, there is a hybrid between the two that is grown in Mexico, and this hybrid (which is linguistically considered a lemon) is yellow-green in colour
I was wondering why they said guavas were yellow??? In Costa Rica they’re green, I thought maybe they were stretching the white insides as being yellow 😂😂
@@ConstantChaos1 in the Philippines it's always sold green. While the insides are white. None of it is yellow. We're probably talking about different fruits but from the same family of guava. I've also seen guava depicted in western media with pink flesh, but that's not what the typical bayabas in the philippines look like.
As soon as Sandi asked the question, I came up with "ba-a-a", and then I was happy that that one panelist had the same idea, but then I was disappointed that there was no klaxon for it. :(
Yea my first though was pineapple but then I read it's supposed to be /without/ N, so I said kiwi before processing what yellow is and only then I came up with carambola
I would’ve never guessed that one. Guavas grow where I live but they’re mostly green on the outside, even when they’re ripe. And the most popular image of mangos are of oblong green fruit but the ones I grow are purple.
Though originally from the South & Central Americas, guavas have adapted so well in many countries. There are many varieties, from small marble-sized ones to fist-sized ones; there are those with white insides, yellow insides or pinkish/reddish insides; there are those that are round-shaped, others pear-shaped (as in really pear-shaped), and others almost the shape of a rugby ball; there are very sweet ones, and there are very sour ones (ideal for cooking). By the way, in most Philippine languages, banana is called "saging", pronounced like the English word "sagging". Isn't it interesting? 😁
Yes, I would have gone with pawpaw as we call them in Australia. The rest of the world knows them as papaya. I didn't think about guava, firstly. Others would be carambola, grapes, apple of Sodom (native to Mediterranean regions) and even spiked, apple or Crystal cucumber which is a fruit, but doesn't grow on trees. Rather, it grows on vines on the ground or in Hydroponic greenhouses.
A fruit it seems few people in the comments have mentioned: lime; like all citrus it's originally a tropical fruit, and is completely yellow when fully ripe.
I found out about 112 being the emergency number by accident. I dialed '123' to get the speaking clock, but I thought I hadn't pressed the '1' button properly, so I pressed it again. That meant that I had actually dialed '1123', which the exchange saw as '112' and ignored the '3'. I slammed the phone down as soon as I realized what had happened, but they called me back and I had to explain that I had called by accident trying to get the speaking clock. The operator's manner indicated that it happened a lot.
I don't think it's meant to be derogatory in linguistics terms. Like it would be common to call any loan word from another language that becomes changed to be "corrupted".
In the past it was common for terms like "corruption" and "bastardization" to be used in linguistics under the belief that the changing of a language represented a degradation in it. In modern linguistics it is simply referred to as "change" without the negative connotations of those words.
@@rainerwinkler6140 but you realise Australia celebrates christmas before the rest of the world right? so did the BBC already air this in other countries first? or after the youtube upload... usually we get eps a 6months to a year after UK (if not 2yrs on average)
Watching along, I got sister! ...not because I was aware of such a rank, but because I've heard nuns often get called "Sister [name]" in media. Otherwise yeah, this game was designed to flush the correct answer out of your head by leading you to a taboo answer. =P
I got "sister", but I didn't get any of the others. I thought of guava as well as many other tasty yellow tropical fruits without an "n" (carambola, miracle berry, cashew fruit, papaya, charichuelo, and more), but I had no idea what the Tagalog word was.
Most Guava varieties are Green. I've never in my life seen a yellow Guava, they didn't even show a picture of a yellow guava as their example. What a stupid question.
What stupid here is the comment it self not the question.... if u r implying that there is no yellow *bayabas* then ur an ignorant privileged human just because u haven't seen one. There's google images.