#lyrics-translation--pronunciation

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Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Speaking and Being: Languages and Experiences Are Linked

Metaphors influence perceptions and behaviors through embodied cognition, affecting social proximity and honesty in various environments.
#slang
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago
Digital life

This May Be Low-Key the Hardest Time to Decode Slang

Slang evolves rapidly, reflecting youth identity and social connection, and serves as a cultural password for belonging among generations.
fromOpen Culture
2 months ago
Books

The Largest Historical Dictionary of English Slang Now Free Online: Covers 500 Years of the "Vulgar Tongue"

Green's Dictionary of Slang is an authoritative, multi-century record of English slang now accessible online for free, with paid options for citations and advanced search.
Digital life
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

This May Be Low-Key the Hardest Time to Decode Slang

Slang evolves rapidly, reflecting youth identity and social connection, and serves as a cultural password for belonging among generations.
fromOpen Culture
2 months ago
Books

The Largest Historical Dictionary of English Slang Now Free Online: Covers 500 Years of the "Vulgar Tongue"

European startups
fromFast Company
4 days ago

AI isn't built for all languages and cultures. There's a push to fix that

Assem Sabry created Horus, an AI model focused on Egyptian culture, to address the lack of representation in the AI industry.
fromwww.npr.org
5 days ago

No one likes being discombobulated. How did the feeling get such a fun name?

The word is very much an American invention. It seems to have been part of a fad in the 19th century for inventing rather fancy, grand and rather humorous-sounding words.
US news
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Doing Philosophy in a Borrowed Tongue

Experiencing a second language can create a profound sense of self-difference and challenges in communication for international students.
Typography
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

SYBAU, WYLL and PMO: what do the latest teen text abbreviations actually mean?

Text abbreviations can have multiple meanings, leading to confusion among adults trying to understand youth communication.
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

Don't stop at Duolingo, set realistic goals, balance skills: how to start learning a new language

Learning a new language not only makes you look cool, it also allows you to familiarize yourself with another culture, connect with new people and enjoy a wider variety of art and media.
Online learning
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 month ago

Can you solve these language puzzles? Test your skills with these problems from North America's biggest linguistics competition

Computational linguistics is a two-way street: You're either using a computer to do things with human language or communicate or translate or teach a foreign language, or you're using computational techniques to learn something about human languages. Her work documenting and preserving endangered languages uses a little bit of both.
Education
Media industry
fromMashable
1 month ago

AI translation tool turns English into 'LinkedIn'

Kagi, a premium search service, offers a free AI-based tool that translates standard English into LinkedIn's characteristic self-promotional jargon and corporate speak.
Roam Research
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Why Do Americans and Brits Speak Differently?

American r-pronunciation preserves the older British form from the 16th century, while modern British r-dropping developed later after American colonization.
Psychology
fromHarvard Business Review
1 month ago

Research: How the "Accent Penalty" Determines Who Gets Heard

A speaker's accent significantly influences idea reception in organizations, often overriding merit-based evaluation despite assumptions that good ideas rise objectively.
Relationships
fromBusiness Matters
1 month ago

Real-time video translation for families: How to end awkward multilingual calls

Real-time video translation removes language barriers in family calls, enabling natural conversations and preserving emotional connection across multilingual households.
fromBuzzFeed
2 months ago

I Hate To Break It To You, But There's A Huge Chance You've Been Saying Extremely Common Words And Phrases Wrong Your Entire Life

1. Tongue in cheek 2. Old wives' tales 3. Statute of limitations 4. To be specific 5. Nipped in the bud 6. Get down to brass tacks 7. Deep-seated hatred 8. All intents and purposes 9. Wheelbarrow 10. Champing at the bit 11. Jury-rigged 12. Ulterior motive 13. Bald-faced lie 14. Dog eat dog world 15. Chump change 16. Dime a dozen 17. Duct tape 18. Can't see the forest for the trees 19. Quote unquote 20. Could have 21. Chalk it up 22. Iced tea 23. Take for granted 24. Blessing in disguise 25. Bated breath
Writing
fromTravel + Leisure
1 month ago

This Is the Friendliest Language in the World, According to a New Study-and No, It's Not English

When respondents were asked which languages feel the most welcoming, Portuguese emerged on top, selected by 34 percent of participants. Spanish came in a close second with 33 percent of respondents calling it the friendliest, followed by Italian in third. Together, these languages form a clear cluster associated with warmth and approach.
Psychology
Education
fromSilicon Canals
2 months ago

7 words highly intelligent people use in conversation that average people mispronounce - Silicon Canals

Correct pronunciation of commonly mispronounced words often reflects extensive reading, attention to language, and habitual auditory correction rather than showing off.
Science
fromMail Online
1 month ago

AI is being taught UK regional slang - so, how many terms do YOU know?

UK researchers are training AI systems to understand regional slang and accents so automated council phone lines can better serve local callers across different dialects.
US politics
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 months ago

Welcome to the calenton': no nation speaks and thinks in a single language

Different languages enrich countries rather than weaken them, opposing xenophobic claims that a strong state must have a single national language.
Miscellaneous
fromMail Online
2 months ago

Study reveals why Barrow and Lancaster accents are so dissimilar

Accent rhoticity differs sharply between nearby Barrow-in-Furness and Lancaster due to intense late-19th-century industrial population mixing.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Is It Better to Learn a Second Language as a Child or Adult?

Parents often hear the warning: "If your child doesn't learn a second language early, they'll never be fluent." Adults, meanwhile, are told: "It's just too late for you to learn now." These claims are familiar and tidy, but misleading. Are they actually true? Is it better to learn a second language as a child or as an adult? The short answer is that it depends on what we mean by "better."
OMG science
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

Words Without Consequence

For the first time, speech has been decoupled from consequence. We now live alongside AI systems that converse knowledgeably and persuasively-deploying claims about the world, explanations, advice, encouragement, apologies, and promises-while bearing no vulnerability for what they say. Millions of people already rely on chatbots powered by large language models, and have integrated these synthetic interlocutors into their personal and professional lives. An LLM's words shape our beliefs, decisions, and actions, yet no speaker stands behind them.
Philosophy
fromThe Nation
1 month ago

Can the Dictionary Keep Up?

The Merriam-Webster editor Peter Sokolowski introduced the crowd of assembled nerds to the idea that a dictionary is not a static document but a living object, constantly updated and remade in response to how people write and speak. In a talk titled "The Dictionary as Data," Sokolowski emphasized that the editors at Merriam-Webster look to how the general public uses language to guide their work.
Typography
Artificial intelligence
fromTechCrunch
2 months ago

Cohere launches a family of open multilingual models | TechCrunch

Cohere launched Tiny Aya open-weight multilingual models supporting 70+ languages, runnable offline on everyday devices with a 3.35B-parameter base and regional variants.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Are There Linguistic Conspiracy Theories?

The term "conspiracy theory" calls to mind a variety of dubious claims and controversies, like rumors about Area 51, claims that the Earth is flat, and the movement known as QAnon. At first blush, these phenomena would seem to have little in common with bogus word origins. But there are a variety of false etymologies that spread virally and refuse to go away, in much the same way that stories about chemtrails, black helicopters, and UFOs refuse to die.
Writing
Typography
fromMail Online
1 month ago

The UK's hardest accents to understand - with Essex at top of the list

The Essex accent is the most difficult for automated speech-to-text systems to understand, while the Mancunian accent is the easiest.
Education
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Fluent at Home, Silent at Work: Growing Up Bilingual

Heritage speakers lack formal language instruction in their native language, creating gaps in professional and academic domains that they internalize as personal failure rather than systemic educational gaps.
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