Like awful writers, large language models are programmed to reach for clichés.
This article profiles and explains the words, phrases, rules, exceptions, and devices that define the English language in its modern form.
Nearly 3 in 4 American classrooms now includes at least one English-language learner, and these students make up roughly 1 in 10 public school students. While their numbers continue to rise quickly, ...
For the first time since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, English learners’ average English-language proficiency test ...
Tatsuya Amano knows how daunting it is to be surrounded by people speaking a foreign language in your workplace. The conservation scientist left his native Japan in 2011 to work in the UK and then ...
The English language in education today is all-pervasive. “Hear more English, speak more English and become more successful” has become a self-fulfilling prophecy. Some say it’s already a universal ...
Britain is facing an uncertain future and an uneasy relationship with Europe after Brexit. Among other things, the country’s woeful inability to learn languages has been raised as a key stumbling ...
“Official” is a very English word. It has its roots in the Old French “oficial” and the Latin “officialis,” and now — thanks to a new Trump executive order — describes the status of the English ...
​Former Liberal MP Nicolle Flint says Australia needs to “toughen up” on English language entry point requirements for ...