These words have all worked their way into the language over the last year or so. If you don’t know what they mean, don't worry. Nobody knew what they meant in 2004.
Try these links to websites that offer valuable, web-based language tools:
The history of the English language is long and involved. Here are some of the more interesting moments in its evolution.
English is not just English. The language has evolved in so many different directions and in so many different places, that there are actually native-English speakers around the world who cannot understand each other when they meet!
The origin of the word Christmas - the mass of Christ - is not too difficult to figure out. But what about some of the other English words we hear and use every year around the holiday season?
By the time you've finished reading this article, you'll know why 'tis the season for turning the wheel, ...
As business goes global, language has to follow. The word ‘offshoring’ has already made it into the Oxford dictionary and according to AskOxford.com, there are others that might follow.
It's an American phenomenon that's been evolving quietly. With the word 'picturize' recently added to the Oxford English Dictionary, is this ridiculous noun-turned-verb trend here to stay?
The mobile phone. How did we ever cope without it?
Though the exact number of languages may never be precisely determined, best estimates say that there are nearly 7000 languages and dialects spoken. Amazingly, 96% of them are spoken by a mere 4% of the planet's population. And half of the world's languages are spoken in only eight countries: Papua ...
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