We use a lot of lingo which our American friends living in the UK might not always understand. Whether it's our slang or accents, depending on what part of the UK they're based, it can get a little ...
Jonathan Kwan (@migrationethics) is the Inclusive Excellence Postdoctoral Fellow in Immigration Ethics with the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics. Views are his own. What term should we use to ...
After penning Billy Currington’s chart-topping 2006 hit “Good Directions,” Luke Bryan found his own voice on his 2007 debut, I’ll Stay Me. Eighteen years later, the “One Margarita” singer, 49, is a ...
Chef David “DK” Kolender often begins creating a dish by envisioning how it will look. “I see everything in my head all the time,” he says. “I see the colors and then I want to fill in those gaps.” ...
Gilbert Gee and Annie Ro depict systemic racism as the hidden base of an iceberg 10 (see illustration in online appendix exhibit 1). 11 The iceberg’s visible part represents the overt racism that ...
The Oxford University Press defines "rage bait" as "online content deliberately designed to elicit anger or outrage by being frustrating, provocative or offensive, typically posted in order to ...
How's your vocabulary? We've all said a word wrong in front of people. Every now and then, we remember and feel that flush of embarrassment again. And again. Well, the good news is you're not alone.
In their classic 1998 textbook on cognitive neuroscience, Michael Gazzaniga, Richard Ivry, and George Mangun made a sobering observation: there was no clear mapping between how we process language and ...
Young British children are more likely than their big siblings to adopt American phrases, a new survey of teachers in the U.K. has found. More than 50% of the teachers at elementary level schools who ...
Millions of Americans have been mourning the death of Charlie Kirk. President Donald Trump ordered flags to be put at half-mast, and signs have been erected nationwide to remember the conservative ...
Once upon a time, the English language was full of stories with “blossoms,” “rivers,” and “moss.” But these words are disappearing from our vocabularies — and along with them, our connection to the ...