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In a pithy piece for The Gothamist, writer Nell Casey uses the terrifically scientific (sounding) tryptophan when she tells readers to "Stop blaming the turkey for your Thanksgiving food coma." Continue reading...
With school leaderboards more active than ever, we're instituting a new reward for play: a Champions banner for monthly school leaderboard winners, emblazoned with the winning school's name. Continue reading...
To fully understand unfolding news stories on the Thanksgiving storm, the Iran accord, Healthcare.gov, and expanding AP course enrollment, learn ten key words taken from New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and Washington Post coverage with Iranians Turned "Avuncular"? Ten Words in This Week's News. Continue reading...
Our List of the Week comes from teacher request for a list based on vocabulary from David Almond's Skellig, an award-winning and compelling children's novel adapted for the stage, the opera, and film. Continue reading...
Imitation for a good reason, imitation for a stupid reason, or imitation just by instinct: "Monkey see, monkey do" covers them all. But what's with the non-standard grammar? Why isn't it "Monkey sees, monkey does"? Or "What a monkey sees, it does?" Continue reading...
Don't wait until a half-hour before guests arrive to realize you haven't the slightest clue what deglaze means. Recipes are not about food. They're about words. Continue reading...
While Americans this week have marked the sad anniversary of John F. Kennedy's assassination, there is a more pleasant commemoration going on as well. On Nov. 23, 1963, the day after Kennedy died, the BBC first broadcast the science-fiction series "Doctor Who." The franchise is still going strong 50 years later. To celebrate, let's look at one of the lexical contributions of "Doctor Who": the name for the nefarious alien race, "Dalek." Continue reading...
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