The most mispronounced brand from every country ~humanities.languages Article 1563 words, published May 7 2024 22 votes
The history of the boycott: How one Englishman’s name has ended up in every dictionary since 1888 ~humanities.languages Link 8 votes
The name for Britain comes from our ancient love of tattoos ~humanities.history Article 1752 words 6 votes
Roads into Norway will get new signs with the country name also written in the indigenous Sámi language depending on the region ~humanities.languages Article 218 words 10 votes
Why is the shape (❤) called a heart? And why is biological heart called a heart as well? ~humanities.languages Video 11:42, published Feb 14 2020 4 votes
Who named the United States and what alternatives gained the most traction? ~humanities.history Video 3:27, published Jan 17 2020 5 votes
Oslo's city council wants the Norwegian capital to have an official name in Sámi ~humanities.languages Article 300 words 4 votes
The most gender-switched names in US history ~humanities.history Article 955 words, published Aug 28 2019 9 votes
The more names change, the more they sound the same language Article 1358 words, published Feb 7 2013 6 votes
The name ‘Mormon’: Why all the fuss, and why now? theology religion Article 1236 words, published Oct 20 2018 8 votes
Red, yellow, pink and green: How the world’s languages name the rainbow language Article 1523 words, published Nov 16 2016 8 votes
It’s hard to have an unusual name in China language Article 664 words, published Jul 26 2018 12 votes
Color or fruit? On the unlikely etymology of "orange" ~humanities.languages Article 2003 words 8 votes