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Texting Improves Language Skill - 0 views

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    Short article about a study that proved that texting is positively associate with students' word reading abilities, and may be contributing to reading development.
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Lifelong Bilingualism Maintains Neural Efficiency for Cognitive Control in Aging - 0 views

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    Discusses the benefit of lifelong bilingualism and it's relationship to the aging of the brain.
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Relativism > The Linguistic Relativity Hypothesis (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy) - 0 views

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    Many linguists, including Noam Chomsky, contend that language in the sense we ordinary think of it, in the sense that people in Germany speak German, is a historical or social or political notion, rather than a scientific one. For example, German and Dutch are much closer to one another than various dialects of Chinese are.
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Confessions of an Idiom - 0 views

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    Cute short animated film by Amanda Koh and Mollie Helms pits an elephant in the room against the skeleton in the closet. More idioms than you can shake a fist at!
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The Search For The First Language - 0 views

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    Throughout time in ancient history, many leaders and top scientists have been searching for the first language, the golden language, given to Adam by God himself.
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Does Your Language Shape How You Think? - 0 views

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    Seventy years ago, in 1940, a popular science magazine published a short article that set in motion one of the trendiest intellectual fads of the 20th century. At first glance, there seemed little about the article to augur its subsequent celebrity. Neither the title, "Science and Linguistics," nor the magazine, M.I.T.'s Technology Review, was most people's idea of glamour.
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History of the Japanese - 0 views

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    Historical linguists agree that Japanese is a Japonic language, but do not agree further about the origin of the Japanese language; there are several competing theories: Japanese is a relative of extinct languages spoken by historic cultures in what are now the Korean peninsula and Manchuria.
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Great Presidential Gaffes - 0 views

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    Courtesy Merriam-Webster: 10 U.S. Presidential (and other politicians') gaffes: even presidents commit word crimes. But are they? Some are blatant bloopers, e.g. "Sometimes you misunderestimated me." - George W. Bush, News Conference, 12 Jan. 2009, yet others, like Warren Harding's use of "normalcy" or Barack Obama's "enormity" have become acceptable. Welcome to language evolution.
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First Words - 1 views

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    Courtesy the New York Times Magazine: thoughtful essays on what language reveals about our moment by rotating columnists Virginia Heffernan, Colson Whitehead, Amanda Hess, Michael Pollan, and others. Some sample titles: "The Underground Art of the Insult", "How `Flawless' Became a Feminist Declaration", "How Rock Star Became a Business Buzzword," "When You `Literally Can't Even' Understand Your Teenager."
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There's No Such Thing as a 'Language' - 0 views

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    The realities of speech are much more complicated than the words used to describe it. What's the difference between a language and a dialect? Linguist John McWhorter contemplates the distinction.
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Why Is the F-Bomb Such a BFD? - 2 views

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    I'm about to become a father. And among the many questions racing through my mind is an odd one I can't yet answer. It's not the existential question of whether I'll be a good dad or the basic question of whether I'll drop the baby while walking.
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Is Bilingualism Really an Advantage? - The New Yorker - 2 views

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    In 1922, in " Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus," the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein wrote, "The limits of my language mean the limits of my world." The words that we have at our disposal affect what we see-and the more words there are, the better our perception.
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When Did Americans Lose Their British Accents? - 2 views

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    When English colonists first settled in the Americas, there was no linguistic separation between the people. However, near the 1800s, upperclass English people wanted to distinguish their power from the poor and therefore adopted a non-rhotic pronunciation of words. Soon, the whole country began to use it. Soon a whole new language was created. Although some Americans, especially those who regularly traded with the English adopted this idea, many were not influenced by the cultural change.
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How would the world be different if music never existed? - 1 views

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    Well, music is not a coincidence. Its a basic feature of life itself. Humans didn't essentially invent music. We just re-discovered it and formulated it acco...
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Do Actions Speak Louder than Words? Or is the Pen Mightier than the Sword? - 2 views

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    This article discusses how powerful words are. It talks about how and when words can be more powerful than actions. It also explores why words can be more powerful.
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The people who want their language to disappear - 2 views

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    It's not unusual to hear about attempts to save a disappearing language - but in one place in rural California, some Native Americans actually want their language to die out with them.
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    Sadly, one of the Maidu tribe members reports, "Those that know the language don't want to speak it. They associate it with difficult times. They don't want to stir up… anything." Having suffered historically at the hands of outsiders who encouraged assimilation and forgetting the native language, the Maidu are distrustful of outsiders attempting to revitalize the language.
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How Immigration Changes Language - 1 views

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    The invention of new ways of speaking is one surprising consequence of migration to Europe. The story of languages is, by and large, one of extinction.
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    In a few years, an estimated hundred+ languages could go extinct due to immigration.
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'Ka Hopita': Hawaiian translation of 'The Hobbit' coming soon | Al Jazeera America - 1 views

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    JRR Tolkien's classic, _The Hobbit_, is about to be issued in `ōlelo Hawai`i, thanks to the work of translator, Keao NeSmith. Hawaiian is one of the most endangered of the Polynesian languages. It's hoped that "Ka Hopita" will legitimize Hawaiian as an everyday language and boost the efforts of a new generation of Hawaiian speakers. "Ka Hopita," which is set to be published on March 25 (a date important to Tolkien fans because it's the day that Bilbo Baggins came home from his adventures), is the first Tolkien novel to appear in an indigenous language of the United States.
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What if ... We learn to talk to animals? - 2 views

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    Reaching for the right words (Image: Jean-Luc Chapin/Agence VU/Camera Press) LAST month, a New York court ruled that Hercules and Leo, two research chimps at Stony Brook University, had no right to legal personhood. But the fact that such a case made it through the courts at all shows our new willingness to consider the issue of personhood for other species.
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Why it is easier to lie than to tell the truth - Rick Thomas - - 1 views

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    Most Christians are Christianized enough to not tell big bold lies. We know better. It is morally wrong to not tell the truth. To willfully alter the truth to something that is not the truth should not be part of any Christian's game. The difference between truth-telling and lying is easy to discern.
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