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Opinion
2 天
on MSN
Opinion
Love it or hate it, nonliteral ‘literally’ is here to stay. And English will survive ...
But, as with “very,” by the 16th century, its meaning shifts away from this purely referential meaning to a more rhetorical ...
Opinion
3 天
Opinion
Using ‘Literally’ Metaphorically? That’s Literally Nothing to Get Worked Up Over.
English language purists object to using the adverb to mean its opposite, but many other words have made a similar journey.
The Local
11 天
Danish grammar: When do you ‘invert’ the subject and verb?
One of the most noticeable differences between Danish and English grammar is the flipped order of the subject and verb in ...
The Cincinnati Herald
4 天
Love it or hate it, nonliteral ‘literally’ is here to stay
Few words so rile language purists as the use of the adverb “literally” in a figurative sense, as in, “That movie literally blew my mind.” ...
MIT Technology Review
1 天
How Silicon Valley is disrupting democracy
Two books explore the price we’ve paid in handing over unprecedented power to Big Tech—and explain why it’s imperative we ...
10 小时
on MSN
10 Common Grammatical Mistakes Even Experts Often Make
In this Web Story, explore 10 common grammatical mistakes even experts make, from subject-verb agreement to misplaced ...
spectator.com.au
16 天
Is being ‘infamous’ a bad thing?
John Prescott, so Dominic Sandbrook observed last week, ‘infamously exchanged punches with a protestor in full view of the ...
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