The mark of fluent English-language writers or speakers is the way they effortlessly do away with words mandated by formal grammar — which only impede the quick delivery of their ideas.
The use of artificial intelligence is leading to a flattening of our language that is evident in the emails we write and the texts we compose. Studies have already confirmed this. Robotic verbiage ...
Learn how Americans use the verb have in everyday English! This lesson covers have, has, and had with easy explanations, ...
Notice that this student used not one, not two, but eight perfectly grammatical sentences to say that their grammar is bad — so bad that it’s standing in the way of pursuing dreams in a scientific ...
Learn 10 essential phrasal verbs used in both professional and everyday conversations to sound more fluent and natural in ...
Confidence in an interview is not a personality trait reserved for extroverts. It is a set of behaviours that signal ...
If language is what makes us human, what does it mean now that large language models have gained “metalinguistic” abilities?
English in a Minute:5 ways to use 'over' Multi-word verbs English in a Minute: 5 ways to use 'share' Onomatopoeia English in a Minute: Verbs to use with 'problem' Silent letters English in a ...
The writer's debut book skilfully dismantles the alleged catharsis of trauma narratives and the myth of redemptive storytelling ...
Word junkie: the bull market in buzzwords, with boots on the ground A down-to-earth walk through “curated experiences” in Sonoma County that translates hype into plain English I took a notebook ...
You probably noticed this place is called Mount Scary. Well, that’s not because of the mountain. Allow me to explain. Y’see, she’s not just a yeti… she’s a scary yeti. Scary is an adjective. An ...
Four new educational bingo card sets are now available online to support first-grade English instruction through structured, game-based learning. The new resources focus on verbs, adjectives, nouns, ...