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Inclusive or Alienating? The Language Wars Go On - 0 views

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    Journalist Nicholas Kristof explores contemporary buzzwords and changing social sensibilities regarding language and journalistic style norms, for example, the shift from "women" to "people with uteruses" or "homeless" to "houseless." Kristof examines the reasons behind these recent adoptions, but also raises the issue of how some peopleʻs use of well-intentioned, more sensitive, and "inclusive" language may ironically be alienating other sectors of society. For example, while the media and corporate (white) America mayʻve adopted the term "Latinx," a Pew survey found that only 3 percent of Hispanics themselves use the term.
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Today's Faux Pas, Tomorrow's Lingua Franca - 0 views

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    Goes over the misuse of language. This is relevant towards prescriptionist vs descriptionist debates from class
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Why I'm Learning More With Distance Learning Than I Do in School - 0 views

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    Article written by a 13-year old student entering high school during the pandemic.
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How Much Should Speech Be Moderated on Social Media? - 0 views

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    This opinion piece reasons that more power will go to the rich and there is no contesting their power no matter if the implications are good or bad.
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Ignoring a Text Message or Email Isn't Always Rude. Sometimes It's Necessary. - 0 views

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    Digital manners are so new that there are no 'official' rules. What is or isn't rude?
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'Don't Lose Your Accent!' - 0 views

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    The immigration debate often centers on who should be welcomed into our country. Some even argue that multiculturalism dilutes our national character - that the very the essence of the country is somehow vanishing. But far from undermining the American experiment, immigrants enhance our culture by introducing new ideas, cuisines and art. They also enrich the English language. As newcomers master a new language, they lend words from their native lexicon to the rest of us. While American English can be perceived as a threat to the survival of other cultures around the world, within our country it is a force that helps to bind us together, even as ideological polarization pulls the other way. Immigrants help us reinvigorate our multitudinous language.
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Use Mirroring to Connect With Others - 1 views

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    Adopting the same gestures, posture or tone can enhance bonding and help with networking or negotiating. mirroring can help you create powerful connections with others. This behavior, often called "the chameleon effect," often causes others to like and trust you more. Professional networkers, negotiators and salespeople say they use mirroring to help them engage more deeply in a conversation and understand the person they're talking with. Retail salespeople who were told to mimic the nonverbal and verbal behavior of customers sold more products and left customers with a more positive opinion of the store, according to a 2011 study of 129 customers by French researchers. In another study, published in 2008 in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 62 students were assigned to negotiate with other students. Those who mirrored others' posture and speech reached a settlement 67% of the time, while those who didn't reached a settlement 12.5% of the time.
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Your view: Stop dumbing down the English language | Times Leader - 1 views

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    This article questions, is 'woke' dumbing down the English language? New urban terms can be simpler, but is that better? Detail can be good, a little extra brainwork can be too.
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There Are Better Ways to Study That Will Last You a Lifetime - 0 views

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    Daniel T. Willingham, a psychologist and cognitive scientist at the University of Virginia and the author, most recently, of "Outsmart Your Brain: Why Learning Is Hard and How You Can Make It Easy," reviews the research on how to retain learning and also read and study more effectively and efficiently.
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Why we need to stop using 'pro-Palestine' and 'pro-Israel' | Judith Levine | The Guardian - 1 views

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    When we reduce the Israel-Hamas war to simple labels like 'pro-' or 'anti-,' we overlook how complex the issue is and the wide spectrum of opinions. These terms pigeonhole people into one side versus another, preventing understanding and dialogue towards peace.
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When Your Punctuation Says it All (!) - 3 views

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    While we may be punctuating less as a whole (a recent study found that only 39 percent of college students punctuate the end of texts and 45 percent the end of instant messages), the punctuation we do use is more likely to be scrutinized. "Digital punctuation can carry more weight than traditional writing because it ends up conveying tone, rhythm and attitude rather than grammatical structure," said Ben Zimmer, a linguist and the executive editor of Vocabulary.com. "It can make even a lowly period become freighted with special significance."
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    The correct use of punctuation can really improve someone's opinion of you. The author of this piece decided to go out with someone based on their use of punctuation in a text message. The author also discusses how we have been conditioned to read certain punctuation marks and how they correlate to tone of voice in the text message. Punctuation marks are an important aspect of language that can help convey a meaning in a text.
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Where Did Our Strange Use of \'Like\' Come From? - 0 views

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    This article discusses the origins of our use of 'like' as a filler word. The rise of the use of 'like' is described as a common phenomenon in evolution of language.
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