32 Car Name Meanings - mental_floss on YouTube (Ep.203) - YouTube

Channel: Mental Floss

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Hi I’m John Green.
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Welcome to my salon.
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This is Mental Floss on YouTube and did you know that “Hyundai” means “the present
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age” or “modernity” in Korean?
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But the brand’s car names aren’t exclusively in Korean.
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For example, the “Tiburon” sports car is Spanish for “shark.”
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And who could forget about the Hyundai Pony, which is English for "pony"?
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Anyway, that’s the first two of many car name meanings I’m going to share with you
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about today.
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By the way, I’m going to tell you about car brand names and car model names.
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So you can sound like a real expert later.
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All right, let’s do this.
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Volkswagen is German for “people’s car.”
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In the 1930s, it was actually Hitler who commissioned Ferdinand Porsche (yes, that Porsche) to build
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the first Volkswagen, which we know as the Beetle.
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Back then, it was called the Strength through Joy Car but KdF was its German abbreviation.
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The KdF was a Nazi program, so after World War II, the car started to be called its nickname:
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the beetle.
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But, it is formally known as the Volkswagen Type 1.
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How's that for catchy?
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While I’m talking about Volkswagen, by the way, in German “Passat” means “trade
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wind” and “Jetta” means “jet stream.”
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Toyota was founded by a man named Sakichi Toyoda, with a "d" not a "t".
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Why the letter switch?
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Well, it’s a little confusing since we’re dealing with translations here, but a representative
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for the company explained that the change had to do with “the number of strokes to
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write Toyota in Japanese, eight.”
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And that’s important because eight is a lucky number in Japanese culture.
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Speaking of Toyota, since the Toyota Crown launched in 1955, Toyota has been using similar
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names for other cars.
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Like the Corolla is named after the ancient crown and Camry comes from the Japanese word
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for “little crown.”
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Wonder Woman has an idea for a Toyota, the "Toyota Tiara."
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It's alliterative!
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Unrelated, but “Prius” is Latin for “to go before,” which the company chose because
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the car was available before, like hybrids were a big deal.
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It’s like a hipster car.
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Side note: In 2011, Toyota invited the public to determine the plural of Prius and voters
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landed on Prii.
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Nissan came from another company: Nippon Sangyo, which translates to “Japan Industries.”
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The first sounds of those two words were combined to give us “Nissan.”
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And if you’ve ever wondered why Nissan's luxury line the Infiniti has an “I” on
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the end instead of a “Y,” you’re going to have to keep wondering because the Infiniti
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website states that the name was chosen in 1987 because the four I’s were considered
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a “fresh spelling.”
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Chevrolet is named after its founder...Louis Chevrolet.
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So let’s talk about something a little more interesting, the Camaro.
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So in the 1960s, representatives at Chevrolet claimed that “Camaro” was a French word
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for “comrade.”
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But it’s not.
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Now we may never know where the name "Camaro" truly came from, but we do know that at a
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press conference, a reporter asked a company rep what the word meant and the rep replied
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that a Camaro is a “small, vicious animal that eats Mustangs.”
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Anyway, the Corvette is a little less ambiguous.
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It is named after a kind of warship.
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Mercedez-Benz is combination of two things: the Benz Patent-Motorwagen and the Mercedes
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car.
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So in 1886, Karl Benz invented the first automobile: The Benz Patent-Motorwagen.
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Then in the early 1900s, a company called DMG also invented a car, the Mercedes, named
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after the daughter of board member Emil Jellinek.
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In 1926, the two parties merged into one company, Daimler-Benz.
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It was originally named for DMG founder, Gottlieb Daimler, but quickly switched to the much
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catchier Mercedes-Benz.
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Hard out there for a Gottlieb.
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No one knows for sure where the word “Jeep” came from, but most believe it actually came
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from the initials: G.P., which can mean either governmental purpose or general purpose.
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By the forties, the word “jeep” had come to mean any car that the military used with
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four-wheel drive.
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The trademark for the actual brand name was acquired in the fifties.
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By the way, Jeep is owned by Chrysler, which was named after founder Walter P. Chrysler
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who, by the way, is buried at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery.
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Yes, that Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, along with a lot of Rockefellers and Carnegies.
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You can't take it with you, my friends, but if could, Sleepy Hollow Cemetery would be
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the most hopping resting place on earth.
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The Aston Martin (2) company had two founders, Lionel Martin and Robert Bamford.
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So now you know where the "Martin" came from.
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As for the “Aston,” it’s actually a reference to a place, Aston Hill in Buckinghamshire,
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England where Lionel Martin used to race cars.
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It was these races that actually inspired Lionel and Robert to start building cars of
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their own in 1914.
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Because, you know, they wanted to win the races.
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Mis Piggy must be driving an Aston Martin because she's beatin' that Fraggle Rock one
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in his carrot car.
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Another company named after a place is Pontiac.
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This name actually dates back to the late 1800s, when the Pontiac Spring and Wagon Works
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Company was doing great business in the city of Pontiac, Michigan.
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Now of course they're no longer in the wagon works business, they also are no longer in
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the car business.
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In the early 1900s, August Horch was squeezed out of his own car company, called Horch.
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It was like an Eduardo-from-The-Social-Network situation.
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Or the real life guy who that happened to with actual Facebook.
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Anyway, he ended up starting his own new car company and this time, smartly, he didn't
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call it "Horch," he called it "Audi."
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But he still kind of named it after himself because the name Horch is similar to the German
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word for “listen,” so he picked a name meaning “listen” in Latin.
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Speaking of which, “Volvo” means “I roll” in Latin.
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Saab Group is a Swedish company that develops aircrafts.
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But in the 1940s, they decided they wanted to be in the car business, which is why we
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know the name best as a car brand.
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BUT, weirdly enough, the name Saab actually originates from the Swedish words for “Swedish
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Aeroplane Company” (Svenska Aeroplan AB) which is abbreviated to S.A.A.B.
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Basically when you buy a Saab, you're buying a plane.
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A really, really unreliable plane.
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Sorry Saab.
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Did they sponsor this video?
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No?
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All right.
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The constellation Pleiades is a cluster of stars that’s also part of the Taurus constellation.
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In Japanese, the word for Pleiades is “Subaru.”
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The Subaru logo of six stars is also an allusion to that constellation.
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There are a few car names that are actually acronyms.
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I already told you about the Bavarian Motor Works in our acronyms episode.
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But did you know that the Italian company Alfa Romeo came from an acronym for the Italian
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words for Lombard Automobile Factory, Public Company.
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Add its founder, Nicola Romeo, and we have the Alfa Romeo.
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Fiat now owns that company, which is also an Italian acronym meaning Italian Automobile
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Factory of Turin.
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Now of course we all know who Henry Ford is, innovator, captain of industry, virulent anti-Semite,
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but I’m going to finish up with a few other brands named after people.
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We have founders like: Soichiro Honda, David Buick, Ferruccio Lamborghini, and of course,
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Enzo Ferrari.
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And then there are the combinations of names: Frederick Henry Royce and Charles Stewart
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Rolls gave us the Rolls-Royce.
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His name was Rolls, it was inevitable that he was gonna get in the car business.
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And a gentle reminder to our Japanese and/or Italian viewers: mispronouncing things is
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my thing.
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And finally I return to my salon to tell you that the Cadillac is named after Detroit founder
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and former Louisiana governor, Antoine Laumet de La Mothe, sieur de Cadillac.
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And yes, I did have three years of high school French.
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In fact, the famous Cadillac logo is based on his family’s coat of arms.
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Thanks for watching Mental Floss here on YouTube, which is made with the help of all of these
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nice people.
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Every week, we endeavor to answer one of your mind-blowing questions.
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And this week’s question comes from Richard Luciano who asks “What is the original method
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and date of making popcorn anyway?”
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Well, Richard, popcorn goes back so far in time that it’s hard to tell.
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Like we know that popcorn was being eaten in ancient Peru, maybe even as early as 4700
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BCE.
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I mean, that was before people had ceramic pots, so they probably just roasted corn cobs
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over fire.
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But on the upside, they didn’t have to go to the movies and pay $17.50 for a small popcorn.
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If you have a mind-blowing question, please leave it in comments and we'll endeavor to
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answer as many as we can.
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Thank you again for watching Mental Floss on YouTube and as we say in my hometown, don't
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forget to be awesome.
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Oh, P.S., Me From the Future Here, fire are you seriously buffering?
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