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- [David] Hello, Wordsmiths, David here,
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You've caught me at a dig
site, excavating a rare find.
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Hold on just a moment, here
we are. (David grunting)
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The word for this video is archeology.
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It's a noun and it means
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the study of ancient human cultures.
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The word origin, the
etymology is fun, it's Greek.
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Arche means old in Greek,
ancient, first, long ago,
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and logy means science or the study of.
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You might also see it in
its combining form as ology,
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so it's the study of things from long ago.
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A person who practices this
science, an archeologist,
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goes on trips to the place they study,
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and there they carefully dig up artifacts
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and then they take those
artifacts to a museum
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or a university and they study them,
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and they try to learn
things about the culture
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that produced those artifacts, right?
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I could find ancient pottery
from a dig in Turkey,
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and then take it back
to a museum in Istanbul,
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or Antalya, or wherever,
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and scrape off residue
from the inside of a pot,
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and say, "Okay, what were people drinking
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5,000 years ago?"
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Anyway, looking at arche, logy, or ology,
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the word parts meaning old,
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and a science or study of something.
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What other words can you think of
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that Use those word parts?
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I'm gonna put on some music
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and you've got 10 seconds
to shout out some words.
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Let's do it.
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(upbeat playful music)
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Here's what I came up with, an archive,
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which is like a place for documents,
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a place where you keep all
the old papers and books.
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Think of a newspaper archive,
all the old editions.
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Archaic, it's another way of saying
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old-fashioned or ancient,
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and biology, the study of life, right?
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Bios in Greek, life,
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let's use archeology in some sentences.
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"I never label my leftover,
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so investigating the mystery
containers in my fridge
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feels a little like archeology."
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You don't know what's in there,
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in my parents' house growing up,
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it was always tubs of cottage cheese,
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but they never had cottage cheese in them.
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That's sentence Number
1, sentence Number 2,
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"If I were an archeologist,
I I'd study ancient pie.
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Now, if you'll excuse me,
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I think it's time to
dig into my latest find.
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Hm, I do believe that's
eighth-century blueberry,
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huh, still good.
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For now, take heart,
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you can learn anything, David out.