Library

but annoying clothes.
Video Player is loading.
 
Current Time 14:57
Duration 12:38
Loaded: 0.00%
 
but annoying clothes
x1.00


Back

Games & Quizzes

Training Mode - Typing
Fill the gaps to the Lyric - Best method
Training Mode - Picking
Pick the correct word to fill in the gap
Fill In The Blank
Find the missing words in a sentence Requires 5 vocabulary annotations
Vocabulary Match
Match the words to the definitions Requires 10 vocabulary annotations

You may need to watch a part of the video to unlock quizzes

Don't forget to Sign In to save your points

Challenge Accomplished

PERFECT HITS +NaN
HITS +NaN
LONGEST STREAK +NaN
TOTAL +
- //

We couldn't find definitions for the word you were looking for.
Or maybe the current language is not supported

  • 00:00

    In the 19th century, The United Kingdom went through a notorious era that nearly everyone

  • 00:05

    is familiar with, a period of time that saw the transition from a country completely dedicated

  • 00:10

    to agriculture to a fully industrialized one.

  • 00:14

    It was commonly known as the "Victorian era" and was ruled by Queen Victoria I for 64 years.

  • 00:21

    Unfortunately, this era was not as we currently imagine it, not everything was long dresses

  • 00:25

    of fine ornate fabric and dances to show them off.

  • 00:29

    This period was much more and not exactly for the better.

  • 00:32

    Due to the early age in which the advances in medicine were found, this era could be

  • 00:36

    defined more by the stench of its streets and its inhabitants that populated them.

  • 00:41

    Today, we will learn how the ladies of that time dealt with their own smell and at the

  • 00:49

    same time tried to look their best, welcome to Copernicus’s Galaxy.

  • 00:52

    How did Victorians go to the bathroom in their big dresses?

  • 00:56

    The pleasure of wearing a beautiful and stunning dress has always brought about a series of

  • 01:00

    problems for women, especially when it comes to tending to their needs, but any of them

  • 01:05

    will tell you that the effort is worth it and it is undeniable that those ruffles made

  • 01:10

    their beauty stand out even more.

  • 01:12

    Now, we have all kinds of dresses.

  • 01:14

    Short dresses, which reach the knee or even some that seem designed to "mop" the floor,

  • 01:19

    there are tight fitting ones and some that are quite loose, with or without a neckline.

  • 01:24

    Depending on the style of dress you choose, it will give you some problem one way or another,

  • 01:29

    which in some cases is a challenge of ingenuity and skill to use the bathroom, however, the

  • 01:35

    ladies of the Victorian era did not have much choice.

  • 01:39

    Because of the length and heaviness of their dresses, women in those days tried to eat,

  • 01:43

    drink and exercise every day at the same time to try to get their bodies used to expelling

  • 01:48

    in the mornings or evenings, by which time they would usually be out of their beautiful

  • 01:52

    but annoying clothes.

  • 01:53

    In spite of this, the body is capricious and there is always a day when, even with all

  • 01:58

    the previous training, your bladder or bowels let you down, therefore, the best kept trick

  • 02:03

    for those ladies was a wide underwear that had no crotch.

  • 02:06

    It was divided so that if the maiden urgently needed to go to the bathroom, she could do

  • 02:11

    it just by lifting the long and heavy skirts, adopting the typical squatting pose.

  • 02:16

    Now, if in order to relieve themselves, they needed both hands to lift the dress...

  • 02:20

    How did they clean themselves afterwards?...

  • 02:22

    The answer is quite simple, if the lady had only urinated she did not bother to clean

  • 02:27

    herself and if she had defecated she excused herself with some ailment and left to be able

  • 02:32

    to clean herself.

  • 02:33

    Toilet paper did not start to be produced until mid-century, but nobody wanted it, they

  • 02:38

    thought it was throwing money away together with excrement.

  • 02:41

    Europeans preferred to opt for having a bidet, which was a kind of pot or bench with water

  • 02:46

    and a sponge to clean themselves, while Americans used to use magazines and newspapers or even

  • 02:52

    cut and moistened corn cobs ... better to not even imagine it ....

  • 02:55

    Victorian women used their own urine to wash their laundry

  • 02:59

    Until the 1880s, there were no washing machines to soak, scrub, rinse and wring out our dirty

  • 03:05

    clothes for us, let alone dryers to get our clothes clean in less than two hours, all

  • 03:10

    these steps had to be done by someone, which was no easy task.

  • 03:14

    For a small farm alone, the washerwoman would have to wash approximately over 150 pounds

  • 03:20

    of laundry, first filling the kettle with about 20 gallons of water before lighting

  • 03:24

    logs placed underneath to heat it.

  • 03:27

    Once boiling, the dirty clothes would be put in, and then for 15 minutes they would be

  • 03:32

    stirred with a special paddle up to 3 feet long, which required a strong arm to use.

  • 03:37

    As you can imagine, there were no products such as detergents or softeners to restore

  • 03:42

    the color to their old garments, which forced Victorian women to do their best to preserve

  • 03:47

    the white of their dresses.

  • 03:48

    Some manuals of the time even recommend repeating the rinsing step up to 3 times to get rid

  • 03:53

    of stains.

  • 03:55

    The best laundromats had their own secret concoctions to remove any kind of dirt, while

  • 03:59

    those Victorians who preferred to wash clothes at home tried literally everything to achieve

  • 04:04

    the same results, from sour milk to remove iron oxide from white clothes or ox bile liquid

  • 04:10

    freshly extracted from the animal at the butcher's to help preserve the colors, to their own

  • 04:15

    urine that served to whiten any percured garment thanks to the ammonia in its composition...

  • 04:21

    honestly we don't know if that really counts as "washing"...

  • 04:24

    To avoid going through this type of process so often, they used underwear that covered

  • 04:29

    most of the body, thus protecting the wool and silk garments from body fluids such as

  • 04:33

    sweat, gaining a couple of more uses before sending them back to be soaked in foreign

  • 04:38

    substances.

  • 04:39

    The Victorian Dentist: From cuttlefish toothpaste to sulfuric acid

  • 04:45

    Although people of the Victorian era really cared about keeping their teeth as healthy

  • 04:49

    and clean as they could, the reality is that with such primitive dentistry and the lack

  • 04:54

    of toothpaste, you'd most likely find that the vast majority would sport a yellowish

  • 04:59

    or hollowed-out smile.

  • 05:01

    It was advisable to brush the teeth with castile soap, a paste, powder or liquid dentifrice

  • 05:06

    that was commonly scented with rose, mint or vanilla essence, but many preferred to

  • 05:11

    make their own homemade recipes that included chalk, camphor, quinine, soot, coral, alum

  • 05:18

    and even charcoal, the latter was not one of the most recommended, but became extremely

  • 05:23

    popular due to its incredible work whitening the teeth.

  • 05:27

    Unfortunately in the long term it inflamed the gums and caused periodontal diseases.

  • 05:32

    Dentists offered a bleaching service in which they applied chemicals such as oxalic acid,

  • 05:37

    dilute nitric acid, sodium chloride or potassium cyanide, solutions which were very harmful

  • 05:43

    to any surrounding tissue if not applied by a qualified specialist.

  • 05:47

    Some fell for the lies of pilgrim dentists who offered a product that cleaned the teeth

  • 05:52

    immediately, leaving them shiny white, but lost their teeth when they became black and

  • 05:56

    extremely sensitive after a few days due to the sulfuric acid present in the solutions

  • 06:01

    used by the false dentists.

  • 06:04

    As for how toothbrushes came about, the story goes back to 1780 when William Addis was imprisoned

  • 06:10

    for looting.

  • 06:12

    During his confinement, he found no better way to pass his time than to create a toothbrush

  • 06:16

    out of calf bone, which he drilled holes in at the top and filled with boar hair attached

  • 06:21

    to a wire.

  • 06:22

    After his release, he began marketing them as the first mass-produced toothbrush.

  • 06:27

    A Victorian woman's beauty routine

  • 06:32

    The women of these times used to take only 2 full body baths a month, the other days

  • 06:36

    they simply washed their hands, face, armpits and crotch with cold water and vinegar.

  • 06:42

    Those people of low income often only had a small basin and a jug to wash themselves.

  • 06:47

    The tubs with hot water were reserved for higher social strata.

  • 06:51

    Since shampoo did not exist as such, most people washed their hair and body with the

  • 06:55

    same soap, which left both their hair and scalp very dry, so it was recommended that

  • 07:00

    they wash their hair at least twice a month.

  • 07:03

    To keep it shiny, they used treatments based on ammonia diluted in water, which was highly

  • 07:08

    corrosive, or onion juice, which had a powerful and unpleasant odor.

  • 07:13

    Given the few baths that could be taken, the most effective way to camouflage the body

  • 07:17

    odor of sweat and dirt was to spray liters of perfume.

  • 07:21

    A popular one was the ambergris fragrance, created from liquid recovered from the intestines

  • 07:26

    of a dead sperm whale.

  • 07:28

    To have perfect skin was also an issue for Victorian women.

  • 07:31

    For this, they had cosmetics that did their job quite well, but at a high cost.

  • 07:37

    Most of them were made with lead, which clogged the pores causing a lethal mineral imbalance.

  • 07:43

    Those with freckles were recommended to rub lemon juice or even carbolic acid on them

  • 07:47

    and then take a sunbath until the freckles burned off.

  • 07:51

    This caused premature wrinkles which in turn were treated with slices of raw meat before

  • 07:55

    going to sleep.

  • 07:57

    The stereotype of beauty in the Victorian era was a woman who was neither too thin nor

  • 08:02

    too obese, and of course they had their own treatments.

  • 08:05

    The ones dedicated to weight loss being the most harmful because they contained potentially

  • 08:10

    deadly ingredients.

  • 08:11

    What a stench!

  • 08:14

    The day the Parliament almost left the capital

  • 08:18

    Let's imagine the unpleasant aroma that surely most of us have had to breathe when passing

  • 08:22

    a garbage dumpster for just a few seconds, now let's combine it with the stench coming

  • 08:27

    from a sewage canal... ready?

  • 08:29

    disgusting, right?

  • 08:31

    Now multiply that at least by 10 and imagine that it is omnipresent, it is everywhere and

  • 08:36

    at all times.

  • 08:38

    That was the essence of London during the nineteenth century thanks to a bad plumbing

  • 08:42

    system that caused leaks and threw everything directly into the Thames River where excrement

  • 08:48

    to animal carcasses and even humans were stored in its depths.

  • 08:52

    This, also combined with the poor sanitation of its streets was a major source of infection.

  • 08:57

    The inhabitants of this city learned to live with it in the same way they did with their

  • 09:01

    own stench and that of their neighbors.

  • 09:03

    To mask the odors, they used to use perfumes in abundance, but unfortunately this did not

  • 09:08

    work on hot summer days when the intensity of the sun and the exponential increase of

  • 09:13

    the city's inhabitants accentuated the putrid aroma.

  • 09:17

    During this period some people still used a well system in their bathrooms where their

  • 09:22

    waste was stored until someone had to take it away.

  • 09:25

    That was the job of the gong farmers, who usually worked at night so as not to bother

  • 09:29

    people with the foul smell they gave off from their work.

  • 09:32

    In 1858 significantly low water levels were recorded in the River Thames due to evaporation,

  • 09:39

    leaving huge banks of muddy debris exposed to the heat, this forced members of Parliament

  • 09:43

    to consider fleeing to Oxford or St Albans because of the pervasive stench that reached

  • 09:48

    them first hand as they were situated right on the river's edge.

  • 09:53

    In the end, this event was necessary for the city government to invest in better sewage.

  • 09:58

    Honestly, we need to be thankful that today we have decent sanitation processes and a

  • 10:03

    facility to maintain our hygiene and health that any man or woman of the Victorian era

  • 10:08

    would envy, although who knows... maybe in the future people will see our habits and

  • 10:13

    cleaning systems as not very efficient.

  • 10:15

    We will see what the technological and social advances to come will offer us here, at Copernicus's

  • 10:35

    Galaxy.

All

The example sentences of CAPRICIOUS in videos (9 in total of 9)

gone verb, past participle is verb, 3rd person singular present her possessive pronoun role noun, singular or mass as preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner bringer noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction dawn noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction instead adverb appears verb, 3rd person singular present this determiner far adverb more adverb, comparative capricious adjective
in preposition or subordinating conjunction spite noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction this determiner , the determiner body noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present capricious adjective and coordinating conjunction there existential there is verb, 3rd person singular present always adverb a determiner day noun, singular or mass when wh-adverb , even adverb with preposition or subordinating conjunction all determiner
the determiner selection noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction which wh-determiner circuits noun, plural were verb, past tense left verb, past participle on preposition or subordinating conjunction versus preposition or subordinating conjunction off preposition or subordinating conjunction seemed verb, past participle arbitrary adjective or coordinating conjunction even adverb capricious adjective
usually adverb khonshu proper noun, singular only adverb appears verb, 3rd person singular present to to him personal pronoun when wh-adverb he personal pronoun wants verb, 3rd person singular present him personal pronoun to to do verb, base form something noun, singular or mass he personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present a determiner very adverb capricious adjective god noun, singular or mass
problem noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present is verb, 3rd person singular present that preposition or subordinating conjunction konshu proper noun, singular is verb, 3rd person singular present this determiner very adverb capricious adjective god noun, singular or mass like preposition or subordinating conjunction you personal pronoun see verb, non-3rd person singular present all predeterminer this determiner footage noun, singular or mass where wh-adverb he personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present
so adverb gorr proper noun, singular is verb, 3rd person singular present not adverb wrong adjective in preposition or subordinating conjunction thinking verb, gerund or present participle that preposition or subordinating conjunction most adjective, superlative of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner gods noun, plural are verb, non-3rd person singular present really adverb capricious adjective do verb, non-3rd person singular present n't adverb care verb, base form about preposition or subordinating conjunction
but coordinating conjunction she personal pronoun does verb, 3rd person singular present give verb, base form him personal pronoun help verb, non-3rd person singular present when wh-adverb he personal pronoun asks verb, 3rd person singular present for preposition or subordinating conjunction it personal pronoun she personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present not adverb as adverb capricious adjective as preposition or subordinating conjunction khonshu proper noun, singular but coordinating conjunction she personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present
do verb, non-3rd person singular present n't adverb want verb, base form to to believe verb, base form him personal pronoun in preposition or subordinating conjunction most adjective, superlative gods noun, plural are verb, non-3rd person singular present pretty adverb capricious adjective and coordinating conjunction pretty adverb lazy noun, singular or mass the determiner other adjective gods noun, plural probably adverb
capricious adjective he personal pronoun does verb, 3rd person singular present n't adverb really adverb care noun, singular or mass about preposition or subordinating conjunction human adjective life noun, singular or mass that preposition or subordinating conjunction much adjective even adverb though preposition or subordinating conjunction he personal pronoun wants noun, plural justice noun, singular or mass he personal pronoun does verb, 3rd person singular present n't adverb

Use "capricious" in a sentence | "capricious" example sentences

How to use "capricious" in a sentence?

  • As love without esteem is capricious and volatile; esteem without love is languid and cold.
    -Jonathan Swift-
  • They say fortune is a woman and capricious. But sometimes she is a good woman, and gives to those who merit.
    -George Eliot-
  • Mistress-like, its brilliance vain, highly capricious and inane.
    -Alexander Pushkin-
  • God is not blind; neither is He capricious. For Him there are no accidents. With God there are no cases of chance events.
    -R. C. Sproul-
  • I wondered over again for the hundredth time what could be the principle which, in the wildest, most lawless, fantastically chaotic, apparently capricious work of Nature, always kept it beautiful.
    -George MacDonald-
  • If justice takes place, there may be hope, even in the face of a seemingly capricious divinity.
    -Alberto Manguel-
  • Honor is the most capricious in her rewards. She feeds us with air, and often pulls down our house, to build our monument.
    -Charles Caleb Colton-
  • The turnip is a capricious vegetable, which seems reluctant to show itself at its best.
    -Waverley Root-

Definition and meaning of CAPRICIOUS

What does "capricious mean?"

/kəˈpriSHəs/

adjective
given to sudden and unaccountable changes of mood or behaviour.

What are synonyms of "capricious"?
Some common synonyms of "capricious" are:
  • fickle,
  • inconstant,
  • changeable,
  • variable,
  • unstable,
  • mercurial,
  • volatile,
  • erratic,
  • vacillating,
  • irregular,
  • inconsistent,
  • fitful,
  • arbitrary,
  • impulsive,
  • temperamental,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.

What are antonyms of "capricious"?
Some common antonyms of "capricious" are:
  • stable,
  • consistent,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.