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Ten Words from Today's NY Times - October 17, 2012

Ten Words from Today's NY Times - October 17, 2012

Learn Ten Words from Today's Times - October 17, 2012.

Then see "Vocabulary Begets Vocabulary: The More You Know, the More You Learn" to understand why learning these words will help you absorb even more as you read.

Today is National Dictionary Day, celebrating the birth of lexicographer Noah Webster, who wrote An American Dictionary of the English Language, which defined an American version of the English lexicon for the first time. To celebrate, let us know your favorite all-American word. Continue reading...
In last night's vice-presidential debate, there was one clear winner: the word malarkey. Joe Biden used it not once but twice against Paul Ryan. First, in responding to Ryan's criticism of the Obama administration's handling of last month's attacks in Benghazi, he told Ryan, "With all due respect, that's a bunch of malarkey." And then later, Biden euphemistically called Ryan's rhetoric "a bunch of stuff" before clarifiying, "We Irish call it malarkey." Continue reading...
Ever since hippies embraced it in the '60s, granola has always had countercultural connotations. In the years since it took the country by storm, the words crunchy and granola, together and even individually, have come to act as shorthand adjectives to describe people with a streak of cultural rebellion, from vegetarians and war protesters in the '70s to hybrid electric car drivers and vaccine-rejecting parents in the 2000s. Continue reading...

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List of the Week: Barron's GRE Words

List of the Week: Barron's GRE Words

Vocabulary.com user Sivabalan T. made a GRE study list based on Barron's 17th edition study guide: "GRE High Frequency Words."

Learn Sivabalan's list or check out other test prep lists on Vocabulary.com.

In Vocabulary at the Core, Amy Benjamin and John T. Crow assert that word study should play a more significant role in English class and across the curriculum — as emphasized by the Common Core State Standards. In this excerpt, Benjamin and Crow explain the difference between receptive control and productive control of words and why our students' receptive vocabulary remains considerably larger than their productive vocabulary. Continue reading...

Tasty MorselsGood stuff from Vocabulary.com

Ten Words from Today's NY Times - October 10, 2012

Ten Words from Today's NY Times - October 10, 2012

Learn Ten Words from Today's Times - October 10, 2012.

Then see Vocabulary Begets Vocabulary: The More You Know, the More You Learn to understand why learning these words will help you absorb even more as you read.

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