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Hi there. My name is Emma, and in today's video we're going to look at the difference
between "besides" and "beside", okay?. This video is useful to watch if you're a native speaker or if you're an ESL student,
because this is a mistake that both groups often make. All right, so let's get started.
We're first going to look at the word "beside" without an "s". So there's no "s".
"Beside" is a preposition and it means "at the side of" or "next to". So I have a picture
here. I don't know if you can tell who this is. This is Luke Skywalker. Okay, here's his
lightsaber and this little green guy, he's not a gremlin. He is Yoda, with his green
little lightsaber, okay?. So how can I use "beside" with these two? Well, I could say that "Luke Skywalker is
beside Yoda." "Yoda is beside Luke Skywalker." So again, very simple. It just means they're
next to each other.. Let's look at another example of the word "beside". You can also be "beside yourself".
What does this mean? It doesn't mean there are two of me standing side-by-side. It doesn't
mean that. I'll give you an example of what it means.
So Luke Skywalker, when he found out his teacher, Obi-Wan Kenobi, had died, he was "beside himself
with grief". So what does that mean? It means, when you're "beside yourself", it means you
have such a strong emotion that you lose control of yourself. You can't think. You just feel
so much emotion. Often when somebody dies, you become "beside yourself" with grief. You
can't think. You just feel so much sadness..
/ˈstandiNG/
performed from rest or upright position, without run-up. position, status, or reputation. To be upright; not be sitting or lying down.
/bəˈtwēn/
in space separating things. In the space that separates two objects.
/sə(r)ˈprīz/
That surprises you; not expected. unexpected or astonishing event, fact. cause someone to feel mild astonishment or shock.
/wəˈT͟Hout/
outside. without it being case that. Not with; not having.
/əˈnəT͟Hər/
One more, but not this. One more added. One more (thing).
/ˌprepəˈziSH(ə)n/
word governing, and usually preceding, noun or pronoun and expressing relation to another word or element in clause.