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Vocabulary.com shared the story of a single Vocabulary List sparking an international conversation on human rights, as a contribution to the New York Times Learning Network blog. Continue reading...
Just as a biologist can tell a critter from a creepy-crawly by the number of legs, euphemism enthusiasts can tell a 5-alarm, major-league, restaurant-quality euphemism by the presence of three words. Readers of previous columns may remember terms such as employee dialogue session, strategic dynamism effort, enhanced pension offer, life problem issue, taco meat filling, and customer pain point. Every time, three words = three metric tons of malarkey. Continue reading...
Topics: Usage Fun Language
With Congress stalemated, find out where that word comes from. Then learn nine other words from this week's headline news! Continue reading...
How speakers introduce additions to the language that then gain circulation is difficult to document: even today in the Internet age, tracing the origins of linguistic innovation is a sleuth's game and it's a subject that intrigues linguists. Now researchers are trying to bring more light to the process by which people create, learn and use new words. Continue reading...
When New York Times television critic Alessandra Stanley used lugubrious to describe AMC's "Breaking Bad," she embedded a context clue that makes her sentence an SAT question writer's dream. Continue reading...
Topics: Vocabulary
1 2 3 4 5 Displaying 29-33 of 33 Articles

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