Take on Ten Words from Today's NY Times - Mar. 27, 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.
Fitch O'Connell, a longtime teacher of English as a foreign language, has been musing on a dilemma involving clichés. Though they are often disparaged by writers of English, clichés are nonetheless "part of the bread and butter of speech, and thus we would be doing a disserve to our students if we didn't encourage their fluency with a significant number."
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When, in a CNN interview, Mitt Romney's senior adviser Eric Fehrnstrom was asked about the possibility of Romney's recent conservative positions alienating independent voters in a general election, and Fehrnstrom said, "It’s almost like an Etch a Sketch. You can kind of shake it up and we start all over again," he was using a very powerful (and dangerous) tool: a simile.
See the Vocabulary.com Dictionary page for simile to review what a simile is, where it comes from, and what distinguishes one from a metaphor.
In his new book The Story of English in 100 Words, the absurdly prolific David Crystal provides a unique answer to a question he poses: "How can we tell the story of the English language?"
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If you saw last week’s Ten Words from Today’s Times, you know that amplify made an appearance, through a Goldman Sachs spokesperson quoted as saying: “It is unfortunate that an individual opinion about Goldman Sachs is amplified in a newspaper.” The following day, amplify showed up in The New York Times again, in this instance when a founder of an app called CityMaps said of the decision to include store-fronts’ Twitter feeds in the information it displays: “We want to amplify that messaging. You don’t sit down and follow 30 bars on Twitter.”
Is it possible that in our age of Internet-driven amplification we might want to check in on the multiple meanings and senses of this old but newly useful word? It's easy to do: just visit the amplify page in the Vocabulary.com Dictionary, spend some time noodling around amplify's blurb, word family diagram, and usage examples. And then click "Learn" to add it to your Challenge queue.
Early on in this year's American Crossword Puzzle Tournament, it seemed that Dan Feyer's stranglehold on the competition would finally come to an end. Instead, he mounted an unbelievable comeback to notch his third consecutive victory. Puzzlemaster Brendan Emmett Quigley joins us again with his wrap-up of the action from Brooklyn.
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