Dutch courage, French letters, it's all Greek to me... In the latest Inside Language podcast, Peter Clarke talks to linguist Kate Burridge about how outmoded attitudes have hung around in English. Interview originally appeared on the Inside Story website, 25 July 2016
© 2017 Elsevier B.V. The world-wide spread of English is one of the most visible symptoms of globali...
In February 2016 the French spelling reform of 1990, which introduced changes to approximately 2,000...
France is known for its attitudes of linguistic purism; not only are there institutional and legal m...
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...
Small words can create big problems. In the latest Inside Langage podcast, Peter Clarke talks to lin...
When Harvard cognitive scientist and linguist Steven Pinker listed fifty-eight commonly misused word...
Benedict Cumberbatch set off a small storm when he unconsciously pronounced penguin as "pengwing" in...
After nearly a quarter of a century collecting data among the Mennonites of southern Ontario, Kate B...
Nouns and verbs aren't the only parts of the language on the move, says Kate Burridge. She talks to ...
Retaining one's mother tongue is a challenging part of retaining one's culture. Here we get a mini-c...
In this interview, Professor Hugo Baetens Beardsmore first talks about his story of how he became bi...
iv, 86 p. A THESIS Presented to the Department of Romance Languages and the Clark Honors College of ...
In today’s globalized and multilingual mediascape the practicalities of inter-language translation h...
Research in the area of teacher cognition (Borg, 2003) and teacher language ideologies have drawn at...
© 2017 Elsevier B.V. The world-wide spread of English is one of the most visible symptoms of globali...
In February 2016 the French spelling reform of 1990, which introduced changes to approximately 2,000...
France is known for its attitudes of linguistic purism; not only are there institutional and legal m...
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...
Small words can create big problems. In the latest Inside Langage podcast, Peter Clarke talks to lin...
When Harvard cognitive scientist and linguist Steven Pinker listed fifty-eight commonly misused word...
Benedict Cumberbatch set off a small storm when he unconsciously pronounced penguin as "pengwing" in...
After nearly a quarter of a century collecting data among the Mennonites of southern Ontario, Kate B...
Nouns and verbs aren't the only parts of the language on the move, says Kate Burridge. She talks to ...
Retaining one's mother tongue is a challenging part of retaining one's culture. Here we get a mini-c...
In this interview, Professor Hugo Baetens Beardsmore first talks about his story of how he became bi...
iv, 86 p. A THESIS Presented to the Department of Romance Languages and the Clark Honors College of ...
In today’s globalized and multilingual mediascape the practicalities of inter-language translation h...
Research in the area of teacher cognition (Borg, 2003) and teacher language ideologies have drawn at...
© 2017 Elsevier B.V. The world-wide spread of English is one of the most visible symptoms of globali...
In February 2016 the French spelling reform of 1990, which introduced changes to approximately 2,000...
France is known for its attitudes of linguistic purism; not only are there institutional and legal m...