I don't care whether or not it was intentional, "me when get" is definitely a phrase I'm going to be using to describe every purchase I will ever make from here on out
Imagine you’re in the grocery getting milk out of the refrigerated section, and someone is right next to you. You pull out the milk, look at them and smile devilishly… “me when get”
I'm a linguistics student, and I remember for one introductory class, we had an assignment in which we had to generate nonsense like this (and conversations no less), and it was so much fun reading other people's submissions.
Was the goal to just throw random words together or was there maybe supposed to be some deep decipherable meaning in them? Like, was it a case of zazy baga or more of a razzlur giut hio? Oh, fuck, I accidentally slipped into nonsense versions of nonsense meme phrases there.
Breaking the rules to realise they exist! What a wonderful example of creative learning. As a student, I would you still the same way off the mark down jacket.
@@1ericedwards I mean, I'm also a native English speaker and I know the words, but what the hell do they mean? I can't tell if autocorrect is helping or hurting here, gibberish might be more decipherable than words out of place
THAT! back when I was still learning english I genuinly couldn't have been able to tell nonsense apart from a normal sentence so I'd have just acted like nothing was strange at all, isn't it weird how we learn to pretend to understand a language as a step in learning to actually understand it
I'm also a non-native speaker and this is exactly what it felt like playing games in English as a kid. Sort of understood some words but sort of didn't at all understand the meaning behind them. Ah, what joyous days those were, back when 8-year old me thought "Animal Crossing" meant "Animal Crossing the street and ending up getting crushed". ("krossa" = to crush, "korsa" - to cross).
"Appreciate what you what, Be are the makes you appreciate what you dad." Beautiful and inspirational quote. I couldn't have said it better myself...amen 🙏
The pure silence at 1:40 never ceases to make me crack up. Like- You know you've fricked up your spelling when even Matt Rose doesn't try to attempt to pronounce what you've just written
@@thediamonddragon1369I've searched around on the internet and found that its a word scramble type thing. the name is supposed to be "Collins Carolyn Ann", but there were a few extra letters throw in.
Crying at “me when get”. It’s definitely making its way into my vocab, along with “me when I lie” and, my personal favourite, “me when- me when I- me- me when- me- me when your mom-“
The me when me when your mom has been and ongoing joke in Spanish for a while now, it’s cool to see how it gets to other languages. I don’t know the origin tho
Reminds me of the ex-president of my country, Mariano Rajoy, who oncesaid these wise words... "It is the neighbour who chooses the mayor and it is the mayor who wants to be the neighbours the mayor"
I almost had a heart attack. I watched this video on the bus and it stopped on stop where there must have been some sort of eatery outside. Then Matt said he could already smell burnt toast when a very real smell of something similar to burnt toast hit my nostrils from outside. Don't do this to me.
i always watch matt during my physics classes, it is nigh impossible to not burst out laughing. i think i have the best poker face in the class. someone was watching this behind me, apparently the way he tries to cover a laugh is sounding like he’s dying from asphyxiation
I remember reading someone in the comments refer to Matt as "The David Attenborough of shitposts" and I think of that every time one of his videos shows up in my feed.
@@infinitenayc9910 maybe it's the point? as in, you gather the letters as you please and that's the name of your baby? this looks like a pregnant woman's MRI, so that's the only thing in my mind that makes sense
I did some digging - the name is allegedly 'Collins Carolyn Ann'. The parents intentionally created this as a baby shower scramble game, as well as adding additional letters to "throw people off".
Honestly, "Greek Nathan's Foot Long Yogurt Hot Dogs" sounds like an awesome name for a restaurant. Makes me wanna find out who Greek Nathan is, how he got his name, and how he got the idea to sell Foot Long Yogurt Hot Dogs. Greek Yogurt/Nathan's Foot Long Hot Dogs on the other is perhaps the single most boring name you can have for a restaurant.
As a non native speaker that’s definitely how it used to sound. It also is how even your own native language sounds when you expect someone to speak to you in x language and they speak to you in a different language
1:40 I quite like solving anagrams, but this was basically impossible. The closest I got was that I think her first name is "Nancy" which leaves SACROSYINLTL. I rearranged the remaining letters and "Collins" was the most plausible answer. ARSYT was left. As a result: I think their name is Nancy "Rasty" Collins...
Greek Nathan is a true genius, nobody would have ever thought giant hotdogs with yogurt on them would be good but he managed to make a successful business with them.
0:31 used to have one of these kinds of signs in our local restaurant years ago. Their version said something like “unattended children will be given a free puppy and an espresso” as a joke, but 7 year old me (who also had a tendency to take everything literally) thought this was genuine and was scheming with my also oblivious brother about how we’d snag this free dog.
Hang on. I’ve experienced that last one. I was working at Danish Broadcasting, when I was sent to The News to clean the kitchen and fix the coffee machine. Now they did have two machines but I started to clean out the second one while the first one rebooted to avoid that one malfunctioning as well. Right then a major political party suddenly dropped out of government, phones were ringing, people were running around, a special News episode had to be broadcasted (this was after all the biggest TV channel in the country) aaaaand - there was no coffee. Desperation ensued.
these sentances sound like something i would say when i was just starting to learn english. i tried to chat with english speakers online and i remember thinking "why are people so rude" when they just ignored me.
You should do one on bootleg asian clothing slogans. I laughed so hard at some of those I'm pretty sure I died. There's something about a hoodie with "WHO THE FUCK IS JESUS?" written on it being worn by a 2 year old chinese kid that is hilarious beyond the words I used to describe it.
Ok, but does anyone else kinda want to try a foot-long yogurt hotdog? Like is it a hotdog covered in yogurt or is it a hotdog filled with yogurt? If it's the first one, I'd be willing to try it.
It like when sense made but not like but opposite of instead of straightforward but can't make brain input. This film is laughing me and was enjoyed that. Peace for good times and societal.
I never normally laugh out loud at things but that Squid Game meme really got me. Something about "the plans plans" and "me when GET". I just can't 💀(skullemojiiii)
4:28 i finally understood this one! it's supposed to be: *"me when i have plans with people vs me when the plans get cancelled"* not entirely sure what happened but "me when get" is a brilliant phrase ngl
I remember a kid at my school frequently wore a shirt that said "London," except it was formatted like *LON* *DON* He always got comments about it..."Lawn dawn???"
I just got out of surgery and, without autocorrect, this would be every statement I try to type without fail. Autocorrect is a useful tool, and this video proves it