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  • Hi, everybody.

  • Welcome back to www.engvid.com.

  • I'm Adam.

  • Today, I have a bit of a special lesson for you, but it's based on some recent news.

  • Okay?

  • I'm not sure if you've all heard, but in Canada, marijuana is going to become legal; or it

  • is legal, depending on when you're watching this.

  • So, today we're going to talk about cannabis, which is the technical name of marijuana.

  • I'm sure you've all heard of this word at some point in your lives.

  • So, what I'm going to do: I'm going to explain to you a little bit about this flower; this

  • plant; this "drug", if you want to call it that.

  • I'm going to give you some technical information first, and then I'm going to give you a little

  • bit more of the street language.

  • Okay?

  • The things that...

  • If you come to Canada, the things you're going to hear people talk about when they're talking

  • about cannabis or marijuana.

  • Okay?

  • It's a big industry; it's going to make billions of dollars for the Canadian government in

  • terms of taxes.

  • It's already a big industry in the United States, but I'll talk a little bit about that

  • as well.

  • First, let's talk about some technical information.

  • So, cannabis, it's a type of flower; it's a plant; it grows.

  • There are two main types of this flower; two geneses, I guess you could call them: sativa

  • and indica.

  • So, if you think about coffee beans, most of you are familiar with the Arabica bean.

  • Right?

  • So, different beans have different types; same with the cannabis - different types of

  • cannabis.

  • The most common name for it that most people know is marijuana.

  • Okay?

  • Now, the things you have to think about, about this plant: It's not just about drugs.

  • It's not just about getting some sort of feeling in your head when you smoke it or ingest it

  • somehow.

  • Right?

  • This plant has been in use for thousands of years.

  • Okay?

  • It has a lot of very good properties.

  • So, we're going to look at the three main properties of this plant.

  • Psychoactive.

  • The psychoactive component of this plant is the THC.

  • Now, we don't need to get into the technical words, but the THC is the part of the plant

  • that when you ingest it or smoke it, makes you feel high or makes you feel somehow different

  • than you do normally.

  • Okay?

  • Then there's the medicinal component; this is called CBD.

  • This is...

  • Doesn't give you any sort of feeling; it doesn't change how you feel, but it is very good for

  • helping you get rid of pains, or discomfort, or just to help you relax, help your body

  • feel a little bit better.

  • If you have some muscle issues, this also helps relieve the pain and the tears, etc.

  • So, medicinal cannabis has been legal for a few years in Canada and in the US, and it's

  • becoming legal in more and more countries around the world because, especially for cancer

  • patients, this helps them a lot; it helps them get rid of the pain, helps them sleep,

  • etc.

  • So, this has been around for a while now.

  • Again, the psychoactive; the regular, every day marijuana has also been around for a long

  • time, but it's been around on the black market, meaning that it has been sold illegally.

  • So, the government doesn't get any taxes from this; it's just people selling to people,

  • and it's all cash, and it's all under the table or black market.

  • Now it is legal, and that's a whole different story.

  • Now, the industrial component of cannabis has been around for...

  • This is what's been around for a long, long time; millennia, like a few thousand years.

  • The industrial component is called hemp; this is the fiber of the plant.

  • It comes from the tea...

  • From the leaves and from the stalk; the part that's holding up the plant.

  • Okay?

  • Hemp can be used for food; it can be used to make clothing.

  • Like, if you ever...

  • If you've ever seen a shirt or pants made of hemp, it's very, very strong material.

  • Okay?

  • So, it can last a very long time, it can be used for all kinds of things, and it's a very

  • valuable product to have, and it can be sold and made into lots of things.

  • So, that's the...

  • What's in the plant.

  • Okay?

  • Now, let's talk about some things around it.

  • So, first of all, there are different strains of cannabis.

  • Now, a strain, basically, is like a type.

  • If you take one plant of a certain type and you take another plant of a certain type,

  • and you mix the seeds and create a third type.

  • So, the different strains will give different effects.

  • You can have a strain that has no THC - means it doesn't make you feel any different and

  • it just has a lot more CBD; or one that has a higher level of THC, so it could give you

  • different kinds of feelings - it can help you sleep, it can help you feel relaxed, it

  • can help you feel happy.

  • For some people, it works that way.

  • Okay?

  • So, all kinds of different strains.

  • And a dispensary, this is the place where you go to buy the cannabis.

  • This is for legal cannabis.

  • On the black market, you find a little parking lot, and there's a guy sitting in his car,

  • and you go to the window, and you give him the cash.

  • He gives you a little bag of something, and that's how that works.

  • A dispensary; legitimate.

  • You go in, there's a counter...

  • Everything's proper, I guess you could say.

  • Now, there are many derivatives you can get from cannabis.

  • So, a lot of people think that when you're smoking marijuana you just take the leaf,

  • and you roll it, and you smoke it.

  • Okay?

  • But there are many other ways to ingest cannabis.

  • You can make...

  • They can make cannabis oil that you can put in your tea, or you can smoke that, I guess,

  • in a vape; I'll talk about that in a second.

  • There are all kinds of different extracts.

  • So, if you think about vanilla, the vanilla bean - they squeeze it, and they get, like,

  • a vanilla juice and they can use that in all your baking.

  • Same thing with cannabis; they take out the certain elements of it, make it liquid, and

  • then you use it for all kinds of things, like edibles.

  • "Edible" means you can eat it.

  • So, now you can buy candy with cannabis; you can buy cookies with cannabis.

  • Some people don't like to smoke it, so they eat it or they drink it, or some other way.

  • Now, a lot of you might know this word: "hash" or "hashish".

  • This is also a derivative that, when they take the plant and they put it through some

  • sort of process, and what they get at the end is called a resin, which is like a sticky

  • substance that comes out of the plant.

  • And they process that, it becomes brown, and they squeeze it into, like, a little brick,

  • and then you can use that for whatever you do with it; mostly for the THC value of it.

  • Now, it has been legal for medicinal use, as I mentioned, for a few years.

  • Now it is available for recreational use.

  • "Recreational" means for fun.

  • You don't need it, you're not sick, you don't have any pains; you just want to relax, or

  • you want to sleep, or you want to have a different experience.

  • Okay?

  • All kinds of different reasons that people like to ingest cannabis.

  • Now, before you ask: No, I have not tried it.

  • I'm not really into drugs and stuff like that, but I do know about this because in Canada

  • it's quite popular.

  • Like I said, it's now legal.

  • I do know people who have experimented.

  • It's up to you what to do with it.

  • But if you're going to come live in Canada, you need to know a little bit about this because

  • it's going to be pretty popular, I think.

  • The stock market is going crazy with the company...

  • The cannabis company stocks, so it's going to be part of everyday life and everyday culture

  • here, and it already has been in movies and all kinds of other things.

  • So, now we need to look at the street language for cannabis; not the technical language,

  • so let's get to that.

  • Okay, so now I'm going to give you a whole bunch of vocabulary; a lot of slang for how

  • people talk about cannabis when the discussion comes up.

  • Now, before I get into that, some of you might be thinking: "Well, you know, Adam, why do

  • you know all these words?

  • How did you learn all these words?"

  • Well, to be honest, marijuana or cannabis, whatever you want to call it, has been part

  • of popular culture for a very long time.

  • I'm going to talk to you about three movies first.

  • Reefer Madness.

  • So, this movie was made in the 1950s to try to scare young people away from smoking marijuana.

  • But it has such a cult following now.

  • It's actually a very popular movie because it's so silly and it didn't scare anybody.

  • People used to laugh about it growing up, like, kids.

  • So, it did the actual opposite.

  • Okay?

  • Cheech & Chong were two characters that made a bunch of movies, and the movies are all

  • about smoking marijuana.

  • Okay?

  • And they're comedies, and they were very popular in the 70s, and everybody...

  • Again, depending on your age...

  • Like, young people today might not know, but older people know who Cheech and Chong are.

  • Okay?

  • Everybody knows.

  • Whether you're a smoker or not, they were very popular.

  • And then in the 90s, you had Pineapple Express; a very popular pot movie.

  • So, there's...

  • It's in the movies all the time.

  • It's in the books.

  • Jack Kerouac is a very famous American writer, and his most famous book, On the Road, is

  • full of stories about people getting together, and smoking, and doing all kinds of things.

  • So, it's in part...

  • It's part of popular culture in North America; you can't really escape it.

  • You're going to see it, you're going to read it, you're going to hear about it in conversations,

  • so it's good to know a lot of these words.

  • Okay?

  • So, let's start.

  • So, most people don't call cannabis "cannabis", except in scientific terms, or in business

  • terms, or in academic terms.

  • On the street, people have all kinds of names for it.

  • Pot, weed, grass, Mary Jane for marijuana, bud because at the top of the plant there's

  • a bud that is the actual thing you smoke I believe, tea...

  • I don't know.

  • This is from Jack Kerouac; I'm not sure if people actually still use that.

  • Laughing gas, herb, and wacky tabacky.

  • So, tobacco, but it makes you a little bit crazy.

  • Okay?

  • All kinds of words.

  • I'm sure there are many more that I'm not familiar with, but again, these are the main

  • ones; you'll hear them.

  • Reefer is actually sometimes used as well.

  • Now, paraphernalia.

  • Paraphernalia is all the products or all the things that you can buy that are not the plant

  • itself; the things you can buy to smoke the plant, or decorations for your house, or whatever.

  • Some people are very proud of this culture, and they have all kinds of things to show

  • it.

  • But in terms of actually how you ingest it, you can use a bong which is basically like

  • a big tube with water inside, and you light the...

  • You light the bowl.

  • You put the cannabis in a bowl, you light it, and you inhale through the water to smoke

  • it.

  • Then you can just use a pipe or you can use a vape, which is like an electronic system

  • to heat it up, and then inhale it.

  • Now, you can also roll it in paper and smoke it like a cigarette.

  • There's a joint, a spliff, a blunt, and I think the casual word is doobie.

  • Okay?

  • Now, as far as I understand, a joint uses cigarette paper to roll the...

  • The tobacco.

  • The marijuana.

  • A blunt uses cigar leaf; you take a leaf off of a cigar and you use that to roll.

  • And a spliff is a combination of cannabis with loose tobacco to smoke that.

  • And I think "doobie" is just a casual word.

  • Now, when you...

  • If you smoke a cigarette, you take a drag.

  • That's a drag.

  • When you smoke a joint, you toke or you take a pull off the joint.

  • And nicknames for people who smoke a lot, like the people who smoke all day, every day,

  • people call them stoner or pothead.

  • Now, these are usually, like, a bit negative terms; it's not a nice name to call somebody

  • a stoner or a pothead, but they're the nicknames for people who smoke a lot.

  • These days, because it's becoming more popular and it's becoming more mainstream - again,

  • because it's becoming legal, now people are calling people who smoke a lot weedologists

  • because they're connoisseurs; they study weed.

  • They study pot, or marijuana, or cannabis, and they know all the different strains, all

  • the different types, and they're, like, a little bit professional, and they're like

  • connoisseurs, like wine...

  • People who drink different types of wine; people who smoke different types of cannabis.

  • Okay?

  • So, that's basically it.

  • If you're coming to Canada, you need to know this because, again, it's legal, it's going

  • to be pretty much everywhere, there are going to be stores, people will probably be smoking

  • outside.

  • Nobody's exactly sure how the police are going to enforce any of the actual laws.

  • It's still an experiment; time will tell how it works.

  • In the US, federally, meaning according to the US government, marijuana is illegal; but

  • in several states it is already legal for medical use, and I think there's about eight

  • or nine states where it's legal for recreational use right now.

  • But just a bit of a warning: If you're in Canada and you plan to travel to the US: Be

  • very careful at the border.

  • Make sure you don't have any with you; you will go to jail.

  • Make sure you don't tell them that you're a smoker because they won't let you in.

  • There are going to be a lot of problems going back and forth from Canada to the US, like,

  • over land border.

  • It's not legal in the US.

  • If you're in Canada before October 17th, 2018, it's still not legal; if you're there after,

  • it is legal.

  • Make sure you're very familiar with the laws; what you're allowed to do, what you're not

  • allowed to do.

  • Don't get yourself into trouble.

  • Okay?

  • And that's it.

  • If you have any questions about this, I'll do my best to answer them.

  • Ask in the comment section below at www.engvid.com.

  • There's also a quiz you can review and refresh your idea about all the vocab.

  • And if you like the video, don't forget to give me a like and subscribe to my channel.

  • And come back for more useful, everyday English vocabulary.

  • Okay?

  • See you then.

  • Bye-bye.

Hi, everybody.

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YouTubeが知らないと困る英単語&スラング! (English vocabulary & slang that YouTube doesn't want you to know!)

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