Skip to main content

Home/ Words R Us/ Group items tagged clicks

Rss Feed Group items tagged

oliviawacker17

Becoming Bilingual: It's an Asset, Not a Waste - 0 views

  •  
    Children who are bilingual, or English is not their first language, should not be looked down upon, rather they should be seen as teachers. We can benefit from bilingual children and children are an enormous asset on everyone else.
dylanpunahou2016

With Shifts in National Mood Come Shifts in Words We Use, Study Suggests - 1 views

  •  
    This article covers a very interesting phenomena; as the national mood changes, the vocabulary people use adjusts to fit the mood. There are a few theories for why this happens- maybe, they say, it's because we're social creatures, and affirmative language promotes group bonding and cooperation. Maybe we inherently privilege positive information. Maybe, optimistically, more good things than bad things happen overall, and the words we use reflect that.
thamamoto18

Swearing, Italian Style - 1 views

  •  
    Italians are using more and more "parolacce" (swear words). In private conversations, within the family, in public life, on mainstream media and - of course - on social media.
christopherlee17

Language Lessons Start in the Womb - 0 views

  •  
    New research suggests that babies perceive sound differently depending on what language they hear growing up compared to what language they hear during the third trimester of birth. Babies prefer to listen to voices that they have heard in the womb, their mothers in particular, and enjoy listening to languages that have similar rhythms. This cancels the previous thinking that babies didn't learn phonemes until the second six months of life.
eamonbrady17

Language Lessons Start in the Womb - 0 views

  •  
    It was especially interesting that this effect held not only for those who had been adopted after the age of 17 months, when they would have been saying some words, but also for those adopted at under 6 months.
  •  
    Researchers looked at international adoptees (babies that were adopted at a couple months old and grew up hearing a different language than they heard while in the womb) and were able to see what babies hear in the womb and soon after birth has an affect on how they perceive sounds. Newborn babies can actually recognize the voices they've been hearing for the last three months in the womb, especially the sounds that come from their mothers. When born, babies prefer these familiar voices to strangers voices. Babies can also detect rhythm and prefer other languages with similar rhythms, rather than languages with different rhythms.
eamonbrady17

Icelanders Seek to Keep Their Language Alive and Out of 'the Latin Bin' - 0 views

  •  
    This article is about the Icelandic language, which is seen as a source of identity and pride, is being damaged by the widespread use of English. Former president of Iceland, Vigdis Finnbogadottir, is worried that the Icelandic language will end up in the "Latin bin".
Lara Cowell

The Agony of the Digital Tease - The New York Times - 0 views

  •  
    For anyone who's ever dated, or maintained any kind of relationship, in the digital age, you have probably known a breadcrumber. They communicate via sporadic noncommittal, but repeated messages - or breadcrumbs - that are just enough to keep you wondering but not enough to seal the deal (whatever that deal may be). Breadcrumbers check in consistently with a romantic prospect, but never set up a date. They pique your interest, of that prospective job, perhaps, by reminding you repeatedly that it exists, but never set up the interview. Breadcrumbers are one step shy of ghosters, who disappear without a trace, but are in more frequent contact than a person giving you the fade. On the hierarchy of digital communication, the breadcrumber is the lowest form. "It really is a cousin of the 'friend zone,'" said Rachel Simmons, an author and leadership coach at Smith College. "It's about relegating a person to a particular dead end, but one that still keeps them hanging on in some way."
Lara Cowell

OMG! The Hyperbole of Internet-Speak - The New York Times - 0 views

  •  
    R.I.P. to the understatement. Welcome to death by Internet hyperbole, the latest example of the overly dramatic, forcibly emotive, truncated, simplistic and frequently absurd ways chosen to express emotion in the Internet age (or sometimes feign it). The trend toward hyperbole appears to echo a broader belief among experts that young women are its first adopters. One explanation for the use of hyperbole (OMG!) With the increase in digital, vs. face to face communication, we must come up with increasingly creative ways to express tone and emphasis when facial cues are not an option. There's a performative element to our social media interactions, too: We are expressing things with an audience in mind. Tyler Schnoebelen, a linguist and founder of Idibon, a company that uses computer data to analyze language, notes "Performance generally requires the performer to be interesting. So do likes, comments and reshares. Exaggeration is one way to do that."
Lara Cowell

Command Z - The New York Times - 0 views

  •  
    Writer Jessica Bennett shares the perks, perils and absurdities of the way we communicate via social media. Entertaining and informative reading.
Lara Cowell

On the Internet, to Be 'Mom' Is to Be Queen - The New York Times - 0 views

  •  
    There was a time when the term "mom" (when said in public, anyway) elicited a certain kind of eye roll. Yet these days, "mom" is the highest form of flattery. And you don't even have to be an actual mother to receive it (nor does the mom you're talking about need to be yours). Mom (adj) has become Internetspeak for the absolute coolest.
cole_nakashima18

Teaching Bats to Say 'Move Out of My Way' in Many Dialects - The New York Times - 1 views

  •  
    A study shows evidence that bats may have dialects, like humans. Researchers studied vocal learning in bat pups.
cole_nakashima18

As the E.U.'s Language Roster Swells, So Does the Burden - The New York Times - 0 views

  •  
    With increasing membership in the EU more languages and translators are needed. Members struggle to figure out which languages should be considered official languages, which leads to disagreements
dylanpunahou2016

Judging Others by Their Email Tics - 1 views

  •  
    This article brings about the topic of how people end their emails differently. In the recent past, it has been deemed "cool" to have an email signature that read "Sent from my iPhone". Now, however, this is seen as generic. People are coming up with new ways to sign their emails that are original. They also aim to include personality and tone. This is proven to be challenging for many people because signatures are generally short. Email signatures can not only help indicate whether a person is professional or not, but also whether the person is irritated, silly, rushed, etc.
  •  
    This article covers a few of the same things people covered from their recent projects. It is centered around the tone of emails and what makes that tone- words like "hi" vs. "hey", emoji use, punctuation, and response time. It also brings up an interesting point. "Research has found that when parties are getting along, they tend to mimic each other's subtle speech patterns".
jolander20

It's Getting Harder to Talk About God - 1 views

  •  
    This article talks about the decline in religious conversations happening within the US. The author, a strong religious practitioner and son of megachurch pastor describes his worries with the trends being shown. His main problem with the shift away from religious conversations was that he worried people were losing faith. He argues that organized religion, and specifically Christianity will slowly die without faith speech. He believes that the reason why faith speech is dying is because of its misuse by politicians, and the media to manipulate the public.
zoewelch23

Secrets of Whales - 0 views

  •  
    Documentary about Whale communication; similar to what we talked about in class. Talks about pods and different accents and interactions.
jolander20

Everyone Has an Accent - 1 views

  •  
    This opinion article entails accents, and how they are interpreted. The author, a Spanish immigrant who works at Dartmouth as a language professor claims that accents are universal. He states that everyone has an accent, but here in the US people who don't have the "normal" or "regular" accent are viewed as different. He goes on to say that Americans tend to discriminate against people with accents different from their own more than in other countries. He wants to remind people that accents are irrelevant, and urges people to accept all accents no matter how different from their own.
« First ‹ Previous 61 - 76 of 76
Showing 20 items per page