Small words can create big problems. In the latest Inside Langage podcast, Peter Clarke talks to linguist Kate Burridge about misplaced pronouns. Interview originally appeared on the Inside Story website, 24 June 2016
This workshop was created by members of the University Libraries Diversity Council about the importa...
The way we speak is bound up with our identity. Your Voice Speaks Volumes looks at why we speak the ...
Reflexive pronouns, such as myself, yourself, themselves, require a coreferent noun phrase (NP) to f...
Content contains strong language. Once a word attracts negative connotations there seems to be no go...
Once a word attracts negative connotations there seems to be no going back, linguist Kate Burridge t...
Dutch courage, French letters, it's all Greek to me... In the latest Inside Language podcast, Peter ...
When Harvard cognitive scientist and linguist Steven Pinker listed fifty-eight commonly misused word...
English is peppered with contronyms - those words that mean one thing in one context, and the opposi...
Kate Burridge and Peter Clarke discuss how and why we turn nouns into verbs into adjectives. Intervi...
Benedict Cumberbatch set off a small storm when he unconsciously pronounced penguin as "pengwing" in...
One of the most fundamental, yet often overlooked, compo-nents of language is the personal pronoun s...
After nearly a quarter of a century collecting data among the Mennonites of southern Ontario, Kate B...
Mulhaüsler and Harré contend that pronoun systems set out fields of expression ‘within which people ...
Presentation delivered March 15, 2011 at Haverford College, KINSC Sharpless Auditorium, by James W. ...
Students in the English department of Widya Mandala Catholic University are expected to master Engli...
This workshop was created by members of the University Libraries Diversity Council about the importa...
The way we speak is bound up with our identity. Your Voice Speaks Volumes looks at why we speak the ...
Reflexive pronouns, such as myself, yourself, themselves, require a coreferent noun phrase (NP) to f...
Content contains strong language. Once a word attracts negative connotations there seems to be no go...
Once a word attracts negative connotations there seems to be no going back, linguist Kate Burridge t...
Dutch courage, French letters, it's all Greek to me... In the latest Inside Language podcast, Peter ...
When Harvard cognitive scientist and linguist Steven Pinker listed fifty-eight commonly misused word...
English is peppered with contronyms - those words that mean one thing in one context, and the opposi...
Kate Burridge and Peter Clarke discuss how and why we turn nouns into verbs into adjectives. Intervi...
Benedict Cumberbatch set off a small storm when he unconsciously pronounced penguin as "pengwing" in...
One of the most fundamental, yet often overlooked, compo-nents of language is the personal pronoun s...
After nearly a quarter of a century collecting data among the Mennonites of southern Ontario, Kate B...
Mulhaüsler and Harré contend that pronoun systems set out fields of expression ‘within which people ...
Presentation delivered March 15, 2011 at Haverford College, KINSC Sharpless Auditorium, by James W. ...
Students in the English department of Widya Mandala Catholic University are expected to master Engli...
This workshop was created by members of the University Libraries Diversity Council about the importa...
The way we speak is bound up with our identity. Your Voice Speaks Volumes looks at why we speak the ...
Reflexive pronouns, such as myself, yourself, themselves, require a coreferent noun phrase (NP) to f...