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2 votes
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The Berkshire mystery: Where exactly is "Berk"?
11 votes -
Former PM Katrín Jakobsdóttir has said the Icelandic language could be wiped out in as little as a generation due to the sweeping rise of AI and encroaching English language dominance
18 votes -
The genius logic of the NATO phonetic alphabet
18 votes -
ITA was a 1960s schools experiment that created a whole new alphabet – and left thousands of UK children unable to spell
32 votes -
Do not try this at home: Medieval medicine under the spotlight in major new project
16 votes -
Marked decline in semicolons in English books, study suggests
40 votes -
They don’t read very well: A study of the reading comprehension skills of English majors at two midwestern universities
54 votes -
English is not normal. No, English isn’t uniquely vibrant or mighty or adaptable. But it really is weirder than pretty much every other language.
27 votes -
English grammar book recommendations?
Hi fellow Tilder Staters, I write professionally for my job. I've picked up plenty of tips, tricks, and strategies from mentors and managers over the years. I also have an English degree focused...
Hi fellow Tilder Staters,
I write professionally for my job. I've picked up plenty of tips, tricks, and strategies from mentors and managers over the years.
I also have an English degree focused in literature.
But I've never formally studied grammar or linguistics.
Does anyone have a textbook or theory book that they could recommend in this space? I've tried to look around a bit but nothing has caught my eye, and the subject is dry enough that I don't have the time or energy to invest in one of the boring options.
9 votes -
Conversational English in 1586
5 votes -
The English Paradox: Four decades of life and language in Japan
11 votes -
Where does punctuation come from?!
15 votes -
Debunking the myth of Hollywood's "fake" transatlantic accent
35 votes -
The Canterbury Tales, or, how technology changes the way we speak
14 votes -
How do I fix my (stupid) use of excessive punctuation?
In online forums I use far too many punctuation marks. I especially use dashes - to separate clauses that don't need a dash (and sometimes I'll add brackets like this because, well, I dunno). And...
In online forums I use far too many punctuation marks. I especially use dashes - to separate clauses that don't need a dash (and sometimes I'll add brackets like this because, well, I dunno). And sometimes I'll start a sentence with "and" when it doesn't need to be there. My comma use is wild and uncontrolled, but I feel it's a bit more controlled than these other marks.
Importantly: I do not care how other people use punctuation.
But I would like to try to fix, or perhaps just improve, my punctuation use. Like the way I just start a new paragraph at random.
I feel like my posts are the same as those flyers that use 7 different fonts, with bolds and underlines and italics (and combinations of them), and with some words in red and some in green and some in black and there's no rhyme or reason to it.
I do like a casual tone but I feel that I go far too far in the informal direction. English is my first, and my only, language. (I love Europe, but I am a bad European. "Please look after our star" we said, and most of us said it in English because most of us who said it don't know other European languages)
Do you have any advice? I'd be interested to hear about books, or videos, or courses, or podcasts, or anything at all that can help. I'd even pay for this. But not Eats Shoots and Leaves please
29 votes -
Pittsburgh smokers more inclined to say jagoff than yinz
21 votes -
In the AI era, is translation already dead?
18 votes -
Does your Irish child speak with an American accent? The change may not last forever, linguistic expert says.
16 votes -
Why does the letter 'S' look like an 'F' in old manuscripts?
22 votes -
Which word begins with "y" and looks like an axe in this picture?
58 votes -
There's a better English alphabet
8 votes