Dish or plate? English vocabulary and prototype theory

35,526 views ・ 2019-02-15

Simple English Videos


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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We had a great question from a viewer called Aurum last week.
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Aurum asked what’s the difference between a dish and a plate?
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Some languages have only one word.
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A dish is a container or bowl.
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It’s usually pretty shallow, so not very deep.
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We serve food from a dish and sometimes we cook food in it too.
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But sometimes a dish is a particular type of food that’s served as part of a meal.
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Like a fish dish or a pasta dish.
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A plate is flat and usually round.
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We put our food on it and eat from it.
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And in American English, a plate can also be a whole main course of a meal.
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But not in British English.
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No?
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No.
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Aurum’s question looked simple, but when you go deeper, it’s quite tricky.
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There are lots more words like this.
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Let’s look at some.
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What do we call this in our house, Jay?
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This is a mug.
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And why do we call it a mug?
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Because it has a handle and I drink coffee out of it.
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OK.
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What’s the difference between a mug and a cup?
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Well a mug doesn’t have a saucer and it’s taller.
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OK.
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Then what’s this?
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Well, this is what we call your coffee cup.
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Cup!
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But it doesn’t have a saucer and it’s tall.
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Yes, but it has curved sides and mugs have straight sides.
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So we call this a cup because it has curved sides.
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OK, what’s this?
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This is a bowl.
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And what’s this?
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That’s a bowl too.
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So size doesn’t matter.
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Well size always matters but in this case what’s important is that they have curved
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sides.
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OK.
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What’s this?
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That’s a bowl.
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But it has straight sides.
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Yeah, but it’s a bowl.
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It isn’t a mug?
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No.
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Cups and mugs have handles and bowls don’t.
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OK.
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So this isn’t a bowl?
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Yes, I’d call that a bowl because it’s bigger than a cup.
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But you just said size doesn’t matter for bowls.
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OK.
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What about this?
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It’s a bowl.
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And not a plate, right?
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No, plates are flat.
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Bowls are deeper like that.
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But it’s also a dish.
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Why?
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Well, we share food from it.
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If we share food from it, it’s a dish.
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So it’s a bowl and a dish.
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Yes!
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Wow!
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That was confusing!
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Yes.
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It’s because the meaning of words often overlap with other words.
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Another meaning starts before one meaning has finished.
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So we call this a cup, but we could also call it a mug.
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It’s part cup and part mug.
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Exactly.
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The boundaries between the words are fuzzy.
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There’s no clear dividing line between their meanings.
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Are there more words like this?
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Oh yes, lots.
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What about the word game?
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What does game mean?
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You mean a board game like Monopoly, or a card game like poker?
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Yes.
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Or a game like football or tennis.
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Or computer games.
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Or the Olympic Games.
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What do they all have in common?
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Well there’s competition.
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We compete against another person or another team.
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If it’s a game we can win or lose.
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But there’s also the game of patience.
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We call that solitaire.
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It’s a card game you play on your own.
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And what if a child throws a ball against a wall?
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It’s a game, but it’s not a competition.
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OK.
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Is it that games are all amusing and fun?
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Well, that’s often true, but some games are quite serious like chess, or war games.
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Is it about skill?
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We need to learn and practice a game to play well – like chess or football?
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They require skill.
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Skill can be important, but in some games, you can win by chance.
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Like roulette or bingo.
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You don’t need skill to win them.
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So there are different features of the word ‘game’: competitive, amusing, skillful.
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But we don’t need all the features to call something a game.
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Exactly.
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The meanings of words are often a group of ideas that are similar.
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But they don’t all have to be true for the meaning to work.
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They just have to have a family resemblance.
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OK.
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Here’s a big question.
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What does this mean if you’re learning English?
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It means words you have in your language might not match English words exactly.
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They could be similar in some ways but different in others.
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Because the word boundaries might be different.
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That’s right.
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And there’s some interesting research about that.
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In the 1970s a psychologist, called Eleanor Rosch, ran some experiments on prototypes.
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A prototype is a typical example of something.
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For example, she showed people lots of dogs and asked them what’s the doggiest dog for
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you?
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A sheep dog, a bull dog, a collie, a dachshund, a Pekingese?
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So she wasn’t asking what dogs people liked.
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She was asking what kind of dog is most typical of all dogs.
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She asked the same question about lots of different categories of things.
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For example birds, vegetables, toys, pieces of furniture.
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And she discovered two things.
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The first one was people kept ranking things in the same way.
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Their answers were very consistent.
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For example, most people thought a chair was the best example of a piece of furniture and
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a lamp wasn’t very good.
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And the second thing Eleanor discovered was very curious.
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People believed the words must share some common features.
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So for example, they’d look at different birds and say they’re birds because they
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can all fly.
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But a penguin can’t fly and an ostrich can’t fly.
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Flying is a common feature of birds but it’s not a necessary feature.
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People kept looking for necessary features that don’t exist.
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So things in her categories shared some features, but not all of them.
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Yeah, and the things that shared the most features were the best prototypes.
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It was like the word ‘game’.
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Different games have some features in common, but they don’t share all of them.
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Our brains want to think that words fit neatly into categories and that there are clear boundaries
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where one word stops and another begins.
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But that’s not how it works.
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The meanings of words are fuzzy at the edges.
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You can’t always separate them with clear lines.
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And this is something that’s true for all languages.
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I have a question.
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What’s that?
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What’s the birdiest bird for you?
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Oh it’s the robin.
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Definitely.
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For me it’s the sparrow.
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Really?
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But robins are such a common bird.
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But in the UK, the most common bird is a sparrow.
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Wow.
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So maybe we have different ideas of what a bird is.
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And maybe you have different ideas about birds, or what dishes and plates are.
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Write and tell us in the comments if you do.
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And if you’ve enjoyed this video, please share it with a friend.
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And Aurum, thank you for a great question.
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See you all next week everyone.
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Bye-bye.
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Bye.
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