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Parker Tuttle

Hearing Bilingual: How Babies Sort Out Language - 2 views

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    An article that further elucidates ideas brought up in class about becoming bilingual at a young age. Interesting enough, I discovered this article from Descubre.com, my Spanish class' practice site.
Lisa Stewart

Letters of Note: Dear 8 year-old Teresa - 1 views

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    fun website indexing many moving letters/correspondence
Lara Cowell

Draft: A Picture of Language - 0 views

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    Blast from the past: diagramming sentences!
mmaretzki

The Neuroscience of Your Brain On Fiction - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    Interesting follow-up to the handout on reading creating simulations in the brain. The brain, it seems, does not make much of a distinction between reading about an experience and encountering it in real life; in each case, the same neurological regions are stimulated. Reading provides a strong simulation of reality.
Emile Oshima

Learning Foreign Languages - 1 views

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    Is this really true?!
Scott Sakima

8 Racist Words You Use Every Day - 13 views

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    The etymology of some words. Amazing how things have changed.
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    Interesting article. There may be, however, counter-explanations for this combined phrase. Hip was cited by Samuel Johnson in the mid-1700s as a variant of the Latin phrase "eho, heus": an exclamation calling for attention (_The Nature of Roman Comedy_, Duckworth 1994). And hooray, according to the OED, is a variation of hurrah (int. and n.), a word used as early as 1716, a century before the anti-Semitic forces took it up as a rallying cry. Have snipped the following definitions from the OED: Word #1. Hip (int.): hip, int. (and n.4) 1. 'An exclamation or calling to one; the same as the Latin eho, heus!' (Johnson). 1752 in Ainsworth's Thes. Linguæ Latinæ (ed. 4) 1768-74 A. Tucker Light of Nature (1852) I. 34 Perhaps Dr. Hartley‥may give me a hip, and call out, 'Prithee, friend, do not think to slip so easily by me'. 2. An exclamation used (usually repeated thrice) to introduce a united cheer: hence as n. 1827 W. Hone Every-day Bk. 12 To toss off the glass, and huzza after the 'hip! hip! hip!' of the toast giver. a1845 T. Hood Sniffing a Birthday xiv, No flummery then from flowery lips, No three times three and hip-hip-hips! 1849 Thackeray Pendennis (1850) I. xvii. 154 'Here's Mrs. Smirke's good health: Hip, hip, hurray!' hip-hurrah v. (also hip-hip-hurrah) 1832 Examiner 609/2 One set of men 'hip hurrah' and rattle decanter stoppers. 1871 T. Carlyle in Lett. & Memorials J. W. Carlyle (1883) I. 116 In the course of the installation dinner, at some high point of the hep-hep hurrahing. Word #2: Hurrah: Pronunciation: /hʊˈrɑː/ /həˈrɑː/ /hʊˈreɪ/ /həˈreɪ/ Forms: Also 16- hurra, 17 hurrea, whurra, 18 hooray, ( hooroar), hourra. Etymology: A later substitute for huzza v. (not in Johnson, Ash, Walker; in Todd 1818), perhaps merely due to onomatopoeic modification, but possibly influenced by some foreign shouts: compare Swedish, Danish, Low German
Kathryn Ouchi

25 Things You Should Know About Word Choice - 4 views

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    "Here's why this matters: because both writing and storytelling comprise, at the most basic level, a series of word choices. Words are the building blocks of what we do. They are the atoms of our elements. They are the eggs in our omelets."
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    Good find, Kathryn. Riotous examples.
Lisa Stewart

Geoffrey Nunberg - Counting Words - 3 views

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    the limits of political word-counting
Lisa Stewart

The Lousy Linguist: Obama's State Of The Union and word frequency - 0 views

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    good blog for stat-minded inquiry into linguistics
Lisa Stewart

No Lie! Your Facebook Profile Is the Real You | Wired Science | Wired.com - 10 views

  • Facebook is so true to life, Back claims, that encountering a person there for the first time generally results in a more accurate personality appraisal than meeting face to face
Parker Tuttle

Na Puka Kula: Hawaiian Immersion Graduates - 1 views

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    "Hawaiian, it was like a flame that went out, then psshw," Kuuwehi Hiraishi makes a sound of a gas burner igniting, "it came back." She's referring to her own Hawaiian language proficiency after returning to the Islands from the Mainland, going from hardly speaking the language to using it regularly in her work.
Parker Tuttle

In Paraguay, Indigenous Language With Unique Staying Power - 2 views

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    To this day, Paraguay remains the only country in the Americas where a majority of the population speaks one indigenous language: Guaraní. It is enshrined in the Constitution, officially giving it equal footing with the language of European conquest, Spanish. And in the streets, it is a source of national pride.
kaimana rosso

Dan Gunn: Articles - 2 views

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    The iconic M
Lisa Stewart

University of Florida News - The Etymology of "Schmooze" - 1 views

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    Linguist Lounge: what we do
Emile Oshima

Barack Obama's Victory Speech - 4 views

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    This article focuses on "tricolon", or list of threes. It's a powerful tool to use in papers and speeches because it's catchy and rhythmic. Resource for my research paper.
Lisa Stewart

Exposing Literary Style, One Word at a Time - NYTimes.com - 5 views

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    includes links to other literary corpora
Alex Honke

Slow Down, Brave Multitasker, and Don't Read This in Traffic - New York Times - 2 views

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    An in-depth look into the science of MultiTasking, along with the real-world consequences it can have in business, school, and our daily lives.
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