Latest News for: oxford english dictionary

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A Word, Please: Different style guides

The World 18 Nov 2021
The serial comma, also called the Oxford comma, is the optional mark before the conjunction in a list of three or more items ... But Benjamin Dreyer, Random House copy desk chief and author of “Dreyer’s English,” argues it’s best written like “taxed” and “faxed.” Publishers of the Oxford English Dictionary appear to favor “vaxxed.”.
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Well, I swan!

Arkansas Democrat-Gazette 17 Nov 2021
"The American Heritage Dictionary consulted the Oxford English Dictionary and came up with this plausible explanation ... It's often joked that English likes to pilfer in the pockets of other languages for words to steal. I wouldn't be surprised if Americans probably pilfer more words than other English-speakers, and often from other English-speakers.
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Please do not call inflation ‘transitory’

Johnson City Press 17 Nov 2021
I’m tired of hearing that the current spike in inflation is “transitory” — not because I doubt the underlying economics of the claim, but because the ever-more-common usage is devaluing a precious word. Officials at both the U.S. Federal Reserve and the White House have been using the word for months ... Seriously ... Cue the Oxford English Dictionary ... (1).
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Stephen L. Carter: Please do not call inflation ‘transitory’

Finger Lakes Times 16 Nov 2021
I’m tired of hearing that the current spike in inflation is “transitory” — not because I doubt the underlying economics of the claim, but because the ever-more-common usage is devaluing a precious word. Officials at both the U.S. Federal Reserve and the White House have been using the word for months ... Seriously ... Cue the Oxford English Dictionary ... (1) ... .
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How to Become Calm in America

Wall Street Journal 16 Nov 2021
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the first English poet to speak of a calm sea was John Gower in “Confessio Amantis” (1393) ... Suffering from the death of a close friend, he says.
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Hannah Betts's Better...not younger: Why Grandma knew best — an ode to the joy of ...

The Daily Mail 14 Nov 2021
Awhile ago, I was called in to advise an international brand. Executives from all over the globe were there to discuss the company they revered ... The Oxford English Dictionary defines them as ‘articles used in washing, dressing, etc.’, and the term originated in the 19th century, when the smartest citizens would make great ceremony of their ablutions.
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SPIN CYCLE — ‘Vax’ is Oxford English Dictionary Word of the Year

Mississippi Business Journal 12 Nov 2021
Amid the swirling winds of the COVID-19 pandemic, it’s no surprise that Oxford Languages . the Oxford English Dictionary has chosen “vax” as its 2021 Word of the Year ... "A relatively rare word in our corpus until this year, by September it was over 72 times more frequent than at the same time last year," Oxford said.
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Fashions alter but Times style changes little

The Times/The Sunday Times 12 Nov 2021
One word that springs off the mottled page is “Bashi-Bozouk”, today more commonly spelt “bashi-bazouk” and defined by the Oxford English Dictionary ...
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Anti-vaxxers who were forced to get shots are taking ‘borax’ baths in futile attempt to ...

The Independent 12 Nov 2021
Anti-vaxxers who were forced to get the Covid-19 vaccine are taking measures to “undo” its effects, including bathing in borax. In a now-deleted TikTok that gained hundreds of thousands of views, an osteopathic physician named Dr ... ‘Vax’ has been declared ‘word of the year’ by Oxford English Dictionaries ... .
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Friday's letters: Boycott theaters, no dystopia here, paying immigrants absurd, more

Sarasota Herald-Tribune 12 Nov 2021
Boycott arts over COVID-19 rules. “Let’s work together to fight COVID-19,” Nov. 8 ... They have the same viral load in their nasal passages ... More. How to send a letter to the editor ... High life ... Dystopia, as defined in the Oxford English Dictionary, is “An imagined state or society in which there is great suffering or injustice ... Oh yes.
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How South Korea became a cultural juggernaut

The Irish Times 12 Nov 2021
In a new Korean drama being filmed inside a cavernous studio building outside of Seoul, a detective chases down a man cursed to live for 600 years. Pistol shots crack. A hush follows. Then, a woman pierces the silence, screaming ... In September, the Oxford English Dictionary added 26 new words of Korean origin, including “hallyu”, or Korean wave ... K-pop ... .
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Indianisms: The creative use of 'Indian-English'

Khaleejtimes 11 Nov 2021
In keeping with the long-standing wisdom that there is nothing new under the sun, I was told by Catherine Henstridge of the Oxford English Dictionary (OED), no less, that they have an example of the use of the word “prepone” from 1913 in the New York Times ... I am referring to the usage of English words differently in India from the Anglophone West.
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Today’s Crossword: Korean drama foods we are secretly obsessed with… Squid Game candy, anyone?

Gulf News 11 Nov 2021
If you’re often glued to streaming sites, looking for the next Korean series to binge on, then chances are you are familiar with what’s on the table, too ... Last month the Oxford English Dictionary welcomed 26 words of Korean origin into its books, of which nine are related to food ... Dalgona horrors ... Image Credit. Netflix ... Bungeoppang memories ... Pixabay ... .
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Tackling the COVID-19 vaccine fear and hesitancy

Graphic 09 Nov 2021
Therefore, little wonder that earlier this week the BBC reported that “vax has been chosen as the word of the year by lexicographers at the Oxford English Dictionary (OED). “Words related to vaccines have spiked in frequency in 2021 due to Covid, with double-vaxxed, unvaxxed and anti-vaxxer all seeing a surge in use ... ⃰ ⃰ ⃰ ⃰ ⃰ ⃰ ⃰ ... ⃰ ⃰ ⃰ ⃰ ⃰ ⃰ ⃰ ... ....
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Aldi bids for iconic Superbuys middle aisle to be added to the Oxford English Dictionary

Daily Record 08 Nov 2021
The product range has gained cult-like status and the supermarket wants to make it official ... .
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