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Lisa Stewart

Betrayal Trauma: impact of writing on health - 3 views

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    very thorough study answering some of the questions we had in class today after reading the short Pennebaker article
Ryan Catalani

Em dashes-why writers should use them more sparingly. - By Noreen Malone - Slate Magazine - 1 views

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    "The problem with the dash-as you may have noticed!-is that it discourages truly efficient writing. It also-and this might be its worst sin-disrupts the flow of a sentence. Don't you find it annoying-and you can tell me if you do, I won't be hurt-when a writer inserts a thought into the midst of another one that's not yet complete?"
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    My problem has always been (and it is shared by others) that when one is thinking (or even just musing), we surround our ideas with parenthetical thoughts (which, to my mind, bracket every moment of waking life) and they become, in their own way (or "in the way", as it were) intrusive. And yet colorful.
Ryan Catalani

Attention all muggles and squibs! | Wordnik ~ all the words - 1 views

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    "The Harry Potter books," writes Jessy Randall in this essay from VERBATIM, "are not just good literature but a treasury of wordplay and invention," and we couldn't agree more.
Lara Cowell

How the English Language is Holding Kids Back - 3 views

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    The Spelling Society speculates that English may just be the world's most irregularly spelled language. Masha Bell, the vice chair of the English Spelling Society and author of the book Understanding English Spelling, analyzed the 7,000 most common English words and found that 60 percent of them had one or more unpredictably used letters. As there's no systematic way to learn to read or write modern English-people have to memorize the spelling of thousands of individual words, file them away in their mental databases, and retrieve them when needed--English-speaking children typically needed about three years to master the basics of reading and writing, whereas their counterparts in most European countries needed a year or less. Moreover, English-speaking children then spend years progressing through different reading levels and mastering the spelling of more and more words. That means it typically takes English-speaking children at least 10 years to become moderately proficient spellers-memorizing about 400 new words per year-and because they forget and have to revise many of the spellings they've previously learned, "learning to spell is a never-ending chore."
dominiquehicks15

Global Linguals in the Economy - 1 views

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    The ability to speak and write more than one language gives people more alternatives in the global market economy. I call these people Global Linguals. A Global Lingual is a person who not only understands the global market economy, but also has trained his/herself to think globally and to speak and write more than one language.
Kelly Honda

Texting vs. Writing - 2 views

http://blog.paperrater.com/2010/03/texting-vs-writing.html forgot to post the link haha.

mcomerford16

Want to Speak a Foreign Language Better? Learn to Write First! - 0 views

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    An article that argues that a good way to become proficient in a foreign language is to practise writing in it.
aikoleong16

Tibetan Entrepreneur Has Been Illegally Detained, Family Says - The New York Times - 0 views

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    Tibetan Entrepreneur detained for one and a half months according to his family. He writes and posts things to his Sina Weibo account and many of his posts express how he feels about the gradual extinction of Tibetan culture, he wants to enhance bilingual education. Chinese-ruled Tibetan regions have Mandarin taught as the main language and teach Tibetan like a foreign language.
anlivaldez17

http://www.smartspeechtherapy.com/is-it-language-disorder-or-learning-disability-a-tuto... - 0 views

This article explains the series of linguistic/comprehension difficulties faced by toddlers and young children with a learning disabilities. A learning disorder does not affect just one area of lea...

language brain learning_disability speech reading writing

started by anlivaldez17 on 15 Dec 15 no follow-up yet
clarissaheart16

Cultural Effects of Writing Indigenous Languages - 0 views

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    An excerpt examining the effect of writing indigenous languages to revive and revitalize them.
Lara Cowell

Chinese Artist Xu Bing's Book Without Borders - 1 views

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    Award-winning, Chinese contemporary artist, Xu Bing, has created _Book From the Ground_, a text that speakers of any language can "read." His interest in pictorial storytelling was heightened by a bubblegum wrapper he happened upon-a series of three images connected by two arrows that instructed the chewer to put the gum back into the wrapper after chewing and throw it in the trash. This became Xu's inspiration for _Book from the Ground_. Xu's book reflects cultural literacy and modern tools and technologies, rather than traditional literacy. The author predicts that the younger generation is likely to find his icon language easier to "read" because they've been exposed to these images for as long as they can remember on the Internet. "I think it can be seen two ways," says Robert Harrist, a professor of Chinese art history at Columbia University who has taught a semester-length course on Xu's work. "It's great that everybody can communicate now and stay in touch constantly through one medium or another, a kind of shared, plugged-in visual world." But at the same time, with the "flattening and evening out in communication so much is lost," especially when it comes to tense or nuance. "The real surprising thing here and the challenge and the thing I love about it is he makes you ask yourself: What is writing?" adds Harrist, who describes Xu as "the greatest living Chinese artist, simple as that.... Everything he does is profoundly thoughtful."
stephiwasaki16

Using Big Words in Your Writing Is Not Impressing Anybody - 0 views

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    "People who use unnecessarily complicated language in their writing are perceived as less competent and confident than those who used simpler language". In recent studies, researchers have found that "the authors of the essays with complicated language were rated lower than the authors of the essays with simpler language".
ronanwitherwax19

Storytelling Enhances the Influence of Science-Based Writing | Psychology Today - 0 views

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    In this article, it talks about the psychology behind storytelling. For many of us, when reading over an informational article, we happen to miss a lot of facts and we tend to "glaze over it" without retaining much of what was said. This is very common and psychologists have found that subtly putting information in to a story will increase the reader/listener's chances of learning the material. A prime example of this was done by the University of Washington when hinting at climate change in the form of a story.
rachaelsparks19

http://www.omniglot.com/language/articles/whywritersabandontheirnativelanguage.htm - 1 views

This article talks about why some authors use their second language to write in instead of their first, and how it benefits them. This isn't a very common thing, but more writers are trying it out.

language words WordsRUs writing authors

started by rachaelsparks19 on 10 May 18 no follow-up yet
jessicali19

The Relationship between Music and Language - 2 views

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    Research studies have shown that music and language have a correlation between them to the human mind and support the close relationship between music and language functions. There is evidence that speech functions can benefit from music functions and vice versa. One is example is that phonological awareness, pivotal for reading and writing skills, is closely related to pitch awareness and musical expertise. Some research papers also discuss the relationship between tonal language expertise and musical pitch perception skills and on whether pitch-processing deficits might influence tonal language perception. Overall all, these studies provide a comprehensive summary of the current knowledge on the tight relationship between music and language functions.
Lara Cowell

Does Donald Trump write his own tweets? Sometimes - The Boston Globe - 0 views

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    The hallmark of President Trump's Twitter feed is that it sounds like him - grammatical miscues and all. But it's not always Trump tapping out a Tweet, even when it sounds like his voice. West Wing employees who draft proposed tweets intentionally employ suspect grammar and staccato syntax in order to mimic the president's style, according to two people familiar with the process. They overuse the exclamation point! They Capitalize random words for emphasis. Fragments. Loosely connected ideas. Trump's staff has become so adept at replicating the President's tone that people who follow his feed closely say it is getting harder to discern which tweets were actually crafted by Trump sitting in his bathrobe and watching "Fox & Friends" and which were concocted by his communications team. Staff-written tweets do go through a West Wing process of sorts. When a White House employee wants the president to tweet about a topic, the official writes a memo to the president that includes three or four sample tweets, according to those familiar with the process. Those familiar with the process wouldn't fess up to which tweets were staff-written. But an algorithm crafted by a writer at The Atlantic to determine real versus staff-written tweets suggested several were not written by the president, despite the unusual use of the language.
Ryan Catalani

How do other languages indicate laughter on the internet? : linguistics - 1 views

  • English - "hahaha" Spanish - "jajaja" Arabic - "ههههه" ("hhhhh" - Arabic doesn't write short vowels, so that could be read as "hahahahaha") Thai - "55555" ("5" in Thai is pronounced "ha")
  • French typically writes "héhé" or just "hahaha." The French equivalent of "lol" (if they don't just use lol) is "mdr," which stand for "mort de rire," literally "dying of laughter."
  • Japanese - wwwww
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  • In Korean it's usually ㅋㅋ (kk kk).
  • Mandarin/Written Chinese just uses hahahaha/hehehehe (哈哈哈哈哈/呵呵呵呵呵呵)
  • russian - "хахаха" Х is read like H
  • Swedish: “hahaha” or “hihihi” or “hohoho” or “hehehe”, with slight semantic differences between all choices; “hihihi” is more giggly, and “hehehe” more chuckling.
  • Hebrew - "חחחח" I think it's pronounced a bit like the Spanish one .
  • Greek is xoxoxo. I've seen germans use jajaja. A variant to korean's kekeke is zzzzzz
  • Indonesians say either "wkwkwkwkwk" or just a regular "hahaha".
  • I think in Catalan we have a tendency to say "jejeje" more than "jajaja".
Lara Cowell

How to Be Happy - Well Guides - The New York Times - 1 views

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    This guide gives a run-down of tips for greater happiness. Some Words R Us related items: 1. Conquer negative thinking by acknowledging and challenging your thoughts. 2. Rewrite your story: we all have a personal narrative that shapes our view of the world, but sometimes our inner voice doesn't get it right. By (literally) writing and then editing our own stories, we can change our perceptions of ourselves and identify obstacles that stand in the way of our personal well-being. 3. Practice optimism: thinking positive thoughts and surrounding yourself with positive people really does help. 4. Kindness and compassion towards others and yourself
Lara Cowell

The Lost Language of Easter Island - Atlas Obscura - 1 views

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    Rapa Nui, also known as Easter Island, is the remotest inhabited island on Earth, 1,298 miles from its nearest populated neighbor. According to oral traditions, tablets with rongorongo, the only indigenous writing system to develop in Oceania before the 20th century, were brought there by the first settlers, who arrived between the years 800 and 1200, probably from the Marquesas or Gambier islands, which are now part of French Polynesia.
Aaron Dung

Essay question: What will win me college entry? - Page 2 - latimes.com - 15 views

  • People want to be seen as individuals
    • Aaron Dung
       
      People want to be seen as an individual person rather than just a number.
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    So basically you'll get into college if you write interesting stuff and you establish yourself as an individual. How hard can that be if we're all different people?
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    Seems that colleges pay more attention to details now because they read essays multiple times and have many people reading all the college essays.
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    This article talked about how UC system used to not read the college essays. However, now that they do, it seems that a strong college essay could be the "edge" needed to make it into some of the more popular and more difficult to get accepted to UC schools. The main point that this article makes is, stand-out essays that represent the applicant's individuality can be much more beneficial than an essay that sounds like everyone else's.
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    This article promoted writing unique essays that establish you as an individual. This article talked about how they wanted to see more character within these essays rather than reading the same essays over again. I think that the point of this article was to stand out by being yourself and by adding some of your own personality to you essay.
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