Main content
Course: 6th grade reading and vocabulary (improved and expanded) > Unit 5
Lesson 3: Breaking down claims and argumentsDevelop | Vocabulary
Let’s explore the meaning and origin of the word “develop”.
Created by David Rheinstrom.
Want to join the conversation?
- i still don't get it?(0 votes)
Video transcript
- [Instructor] Prepare yourselves for some advanced language wordsmiths, because it's time for us to
develop our vocabularies. That's right. The word I'm focusing on
in this video is develop. Develop. It's a verb. It means to grow larger or more complex, to build or improve. The noun form is development, which can mean how
someone or something grows or a building project. Now let's develop our understanding, ah, of this word by breaking
it down into parts. The de part is just another
form of a Latin dis, meaning not or away. And velop comes from a French word that means to wrap up or to roll up. But its origins beyond that are uncertain. I love word mysteries like that. So what this word means is the opposite of rolling or wrapping something up. We're developing it. We're unrolling it. Imagine a map being unrolled over a table or a suitcase being unpacked so you can plan a trip
or choose an outfit. You are expanding something in size: unzipping the suitcase, stretching the map out
to its fullest extent. That's what development literally means. But those are the pieces we have: de and velop. Can you think of words that
contain those word parts? Let's go. 10 seconds. Music's on. (soft music) Welcome back. Here are some words I came up with. The first two are very similar. There's envelop, the verb, which means to roll or
cover something up, right? En means in, and velop means to roll, so it's something that's been
rolled up in something else. And then there's the
related noun, envelope, which some people pronounce envelope, which is a container of some kind, like a paper envelope or
envelope for sending a letter. And with de we have destabilized, to make something unstable, not stable. This can be literal. The stool's leg cracked, destabilizing it. Or it can be figurative. The news that Helen's
mother had been a wizard this whole time was
psychologically destabilizing. Those are words made up
from parts of develop. In music, the term development
refers to a part of the piece where you explore variations
on your initial theme. So let's get to the development and use this word in a
few different sentences. Over many millions of years, sea slugs developed a wild
variety of natural defenses. These defenses are so wild, y'all. Some of them eat jellyfish and steal jellyfish stinger cells to protect themselves with. What a strange technique! To have evolved or developed. It has matured. It's become more advanced. Once, they were defenseless
little sea slugs, but now they have jellyfish
stingers in their tentacles. Okay, let me use it figuratively. Jenna developed her essays
argument over numerous revisions. She built it out. She made it better. She's not literally
building something physical. She's developing ideas. Okay, now let's see one
that uses the noun form of the word develop: development. The new mayor pursued a
big housing development on the site of the old soda factory. A housing development is
when you turn something into housing, right? Here's this abandoned soda factory, and now the mayor wants to redevelop it, wants to build something there to make something new out of
what had been there previously. I even wonder what it would be like to live in an apartment
that used to be a factory. Not too long ago when I lived in Chicago, there was this chocolate factory that made all of downtown
smell like chocolate brownies. And I always wondered
what it would be like to live in that part of the city. Let that idea develop in your head. What kind of factory would
you most want to live near? Or what kind of factory would
you most like to live in? Well, I think I've pretty well
developed your understanding of this word. You can learn anything. David out.