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Doge: such grammar. Very rules. Most linguistics. Wow
You know an internet meme has pretty much breathed its last when the Today programme brings in someone to talk about it and explain why it’s funny, while the presenter patronises them and pronounces the word “online” as though they’re picking it up with tweezers. Today, that happened to Doge. (In fairness Evan Davis, for […]
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Man Bites Sandwich
Our reporters interview people all the time — sometimes over lunch, dinner or coffee. Often, though, the reference to what someone is consuming seems rote or pointless. This write-by-numbers effect is even worse if we use cliched descriptions like “nibbled,” “munched” or “picked at.” After Deadline http://ift.tt/1j7OZFD
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New issue of the Linguistics and Education Bulletin
New issue of the Linguistics and Education Bulletin via Tumblr http://ift.tt/1cFaDMB
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Protected: Discourse and Philosophy: Applications to Social Conflict
There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.
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UK universities – it’s time to go to India
In five year’s time, India will have the largest number of students enrolled in higher education. The UK can’t sit back, it must go to India, urges report UK universities must go to India if they are to benefit from a shake up to international higher education which will see India enrolling the largest number […]
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The pedants’ revolt: lament for a golden age of grammar that never existed | Mind your language
As the grammar wars rumble on, can the prescriptivists and the descriptivists ever be friends? It seems unlikely The great grammarian Otto Jesperson, writing in 1909, said English grammar was “not a set of stiff dogmatic precepts, according to which some things are correct and others absolutely wrong”; but was living and developing, “founded on […]