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Tools: Wordnik. The Anagram Engine Free Online Anagram Generator + Scrabble solver. The Pimsleur Approach to language. Last Updated: 4/14/2014 09:28 PST What if you were told there was a way you may avoid dementia, strengthen your cognitive skills, and heighten your intelligence, and all you had to do was learn to strike up basic conversaions in another language? It probably sounds great, because if you’re like most you would love to be able to speak a second language. But then, you recall your experience in high school foreign language – boring rote memorization and long hours with little progress – and perhaps it doesn’t sound so good any more. But, what if you were told it would take only 10 days to be on your way to becoming bilingual? But now, the collective evidence from a number of recent studies suggests that the bilingual experience improves the brain’s so-called executive function — a command system that directs the attention processes that we use for planning, solving problems, and performing various other mentally demanding tasks What is the Pimsleur Approach?

The meanings and origins of sayings and phrases. Synonym Finder » Find synonyms, antonyms & definition for (almost) any word. The Phrontistery: Obscure Words and Vocabulary Resources. Confusing Words. Urban Dictionary, May 5: Congratsturbating.

Internet Anagram Server / I, Rearrangement Servant : anagram, anagrams, nag a ram, software, anagramme, anagrama, wordplay, word play, anagram creator, anagram solver, anagram finder, anagram generator, anagram maker, anagram unscrambler, anagram machine, In News:The New York TimesSydney Morning HeraldThe Globe and MailJerusalem Post Did you know that parliament is an anagram of partial men? Or, Clint Eastwood an anagram of Old West Action? Someone once said, "All the life's wisdom can be found in anagrams. Anagrams never lie. " Here is your chance to discover the wisdom of anagrams.

Fun With Words > The Wordplay Web Site. List of fairy tales. A modern definition of the fairy tale, as provided by Jens Tismar's monologue in German, is a story that differs "from an oral folk tale"; is written by "a single identifiable author"; can be characterised as "simple and anonymous"; and exists in a mutable and difficult to define genre with a close relationship to folktales.[1] Jump up ^ Zipes, xvJump up ^ Laura Gibbs (July 12, 2003).

"Don Giovanni de la Fortuna". Mythfolklore.net. Retrieved 26 September 2010. The Always Amusing Euphemism Generator. How strong is your vocabulary? The Oxford comma: Is a comma grammar? FAQ about Fan Fiction -- Chilling Effects Clearinghouse. Reverse Dictionary. <div id="needs_javascript"><center><b>Note: OneLook Thesaurus requires JavaScript. </b><br /><img src="/img/a.gif? Q=omg_a_user_without_js"> If you have disabled JavaScript in your browser, please <a href=" it for this site</a> or use the <a href="/?

W=entersearchhere&loc=revfp_legacy">old version of the reverse dictionary</a> here. </p><p></center><div> How do I use OneLook's thesaurus / reverse dictionary? This tool lets you describe a concept and get back a list of words and phrases related to that concept. What are some examples? What are patterns? I'm only looking for synonyms! For some kinds of searches only the first result or the first few results are likely to be useful.

Filters Your search can be refined in various ways using the filters that appear in the "Filter by... " menu on the results page. How does it work? Other ways to access this service: Is this available in any language other than English? OneLook is a service of Datamuse. Action Verbs Game. Baby Boomer Slang | BabyBoomerDaily.com. Etymology: the study of the history of words in popular culture, their origins, and how the meaning may have changed over time.

Acid, referring to LSD, was first recorded in 1966. The compound was synthesized by Albert Hofmann in 1938 from ergot, a grain fungus that typically grows on rice. LSD is an acronym for its chemical name: lysergic acid diethylamide-25. “Acid” is sometimes used to describe an intense color, and likely contributed to its popularity with baby boomers as slang for LSD. {see Psychedelic, below} Amped, as in “excited/ready-to go,” appeared in 1960s baby boomer talk, based on amp, the abbreviation for music amplifiers. Bad, meaning good, popular high school slang in the 1950s and 60s, was picked up from 1920s jazz language.

Bag, as a particular interest or area of expertise, is from 1964 and came from jazz jargon. Bang for the buck was a cold-war military term, indicating greater firepower for expenditure. Singer Dusty Springfield’s beehive inspired a generation. The Internet Guide to Jazz Age Slang. Below you will find an alphabetical listing of slang words used in the "Jazz Age" (generally taken to mean the years of the Roaring Twenties and the Great Depression). The Jazz Age was the first modern era to emphasize youth culture over the tastes of the older generations; the flapper sub-culture had a tremendous influence on main stream America--many new words and phrases were coined by these liberated women. These are the most common words and phrases of the time, many of which you may be surprised to note are still very much in use today! Some entries were the exclusive domain of students (or rather, those of student age; only a very small percentage of the population attended college) or flappers and have been indicated as such with italicized monikers.

Also, the words that emerged in a particular year are noted appropriately. Note: the majority of the entries were gleaned from a great slang dictionary called Flappers 2 Rappers, written by Tom Dalzell (Merriam-Webster, 1996). Write Your Name in Elvish in Ten Minutes. Write Your Name in Elvish in Ten Minutes You want to write your name in Elvish, but every place you go seems to make it harder than it ought to be. Elvish writing looks beautiful and mysterious, but does it really have to be impossible to understand? Why doesn't somebody just spell out the alphabet so you can simply substitute the letters and get straight to the result?

That's exactly what I've done here. Learn to write your name in Elvish in ten minutes. It's not very hard. Here's the alphabet. That's it. Generally the vowels go above the consonants, but sometimes, in the case of Y and silent E, they go below. The straight line underneath is just one way to make one character do the work of two. The line above a consonant means that a nasal N or M precedes the consonant in question. Here's one last example with two different letter combinations. I am often asked how to handle double vowel situations. That's all you need to get started. Good luck! Ned Gulley Want an Elvish tattoo? Word Families. Advertisement. EnchantedLearning.com is a user-supported site.

As a bonus, site members have access to a banner-ad-free version of the site, with print-friendly pages.Click here to learn more. (Already a member? Click here.) Word families are groups of words that have a common feature or pattern - they have some of the same combinations of letters in them and a similar sound. For example, at, cat, hat, and fat are a family of words with the "at" sound and letter combination in common.

The 37 most common word families in English (according to Wylie and Durrell) are: ack, ain, ake, ale, all, ame, an, ank, ap, ash, at, ate, aw ay, eat, ell, est, ice, ick, ide, ight, ill, in, ine, ing, ink, ip, it, ock, oke, op, ore, ot, uck ,ug, ump, unk. Many of the nursery rhymes contain common word families. The following is a list of the most common word families in English (from Wylie and Durrell, 1970, plus a few extra word families) and examples of each. Word Families Books to Print About Word Families. Gen Y’s New Words for 2009 | Work Exposed the Blog. NEW SLANG From povo and myselfish to retox and kward, the terms to know for 2009 While we understand the fleeting nature of slang and promise we are not “trying to make ‘fetch’ happen,” each year ushers in a bevy of new words you might hear and may even want to use (though we urge you to do so sparingly). 2009 introduces us to a vocabulary inspired by pop culture and technology, and here are a few of the favorites heard from the streets, our bloggers, and Gen Ys who know… RECESSION-INSPIRED SLANG Povo (po-vo) “Caroline, I can’t go out to dinner tonight: My pay cut has left me totally povo.”

Ex-hole n. Your ex boyfriend/girlfriend who dumped you via Post-it/text/drop-off-the-face-of-the-earth-disappearing-act and who is now flouncing around town with a new love interest “I bumped into my ex-hole this morning – she said she was so sorry that she cheated on me, blah blah blah. I wanted to puke.” Cupcake v. Hot Room n. DIGITAL SLANG Pwn (pone) v. Epic Fail n. Geequals n. Learn the phonetic alphabet. By stretch | Thursday, December 31, 2009 at 3:18 a.m.

UTC How often have you been on one end of a telephone conversation that went like this? A: "Okay, give me the MAC address. " B: "Zero zero, zero two, six bee--" A: "Six what? " B: "Bee. " ...and so on. The phonetic alphabet is a mapping of individual letters and numbers to specially chosen words which are unlikely to be mistaken for one another (for instance, none of the words in the phonetic alphabet rhyme). About the Author Jeremy Stretch is a network engineer living in the Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina area. Comments Dedan (guest) December 31, 2009 at 3:28 a.m. I find this usually identifies the person I am talking to as a veteran. CiscomonkeyDecember 31, 2009 at 3:45 a.m. I do this by habit (former military here). Haakon (guest) December 31, 2009 at 3:58 a.m.

Using the NATO phonetic alphabet saved me so much frustration when doing first level helpdesk. GabrooksDecember 31, 2009 at 3:58 a.m. AlvarezpDecember 31, 2009 at 4:07 a.m. Gen-Y Slang. Lexicon of Gen-XY vernacular, by Lexicon. fly-describes something that is good, like a girl that looks sexy or a car that looks good. dope- new word for cool. money- similar to fly, only more so.

Can be applied more universally. betty-same as babe or chic, only more respectful. baby- same as babe or chic, only not so respectful, used between guys, usually. harsh-[b/]usu used to describe an overreaction. [b]shenanigans- desribes a situation in which some strange things occur as a result of an individuals or groups actions. fiend- an addict, as in "I am a straight dope fiend" can be conjugated to "fiending" as in craving what one is a addicted to. jones very retro, this term means the same thing it always has. porn- something that has intrinsic value due to rarity and shock effect, or an occurence that is very dramatic. Porn-star- a drama queen, not to be confused with the popular clothing line. -of death something that is very hard to endure or tiresome. Ill- in poor taste, usually. Deal- cope. VocabGrabber. Word Information - an English dictionary about English vocabulary words and etymologies derived primarily from Latin and Greek word origins.

Latin Mottos, Latin Phrases, Latin Quotes and Latin Sayings. A bene placito - At one's pleasureA capite ad calcem - From head to heelA cappella - In church [style] - i.e. Vocal music onlyA contrario - From a contrary positionA cruce salus - From the cross comes salvationA Deo et Rege - From God and the KingA fortiori - With yet stronger reasonA fronte praecipitium a tergo lupi - A precipice in front, wolves behind (between a rock and a hard place)A mari usque ad mare - From sea to sea (Motto of Canada)A mensa et thoro - From board and bed (legal separation)A pedibus usque ad caput - From feet to headA posse ad esse - From possibility to actualityA posteriori - From what comes after. 20 obsolete English words that should make a comeback. Photo: Katherine Hodgson If we all start using them, these words can be resurrected.

DURING MY UNDERGRADUATE studies as a Linguistics major, one of the things that struck me most is the amazing fluidity of language. New words are created; older words go out of style. Words can change meaning over time, vowel sounds shift, consonants are lost or added and one word becomes another. Living languages refuse to be static. The following words have sadly disappeared from modern English, but it’s easy to see how they could be incorporated into everyday conversation. Words are from Erin McKean’s two-volume series: Weird and Wonderful Words and Totally Weird and Wonderful Words. 1.

Verb trans. – “To confuse, jumble” – First of all this word is just fun to say in its various forms. 2. 3. Verb trans. – “To scrape together; to gather together from various sources” – I’m sure this wasn’t the original meaning of the word, but when I read the definition I immediately thought of copy-pasting. 4. 5. 6. 7. FREE Rhyming Dictionary: Find Rhyming Words in Seconds. Definitions of Words for Divination and Fortune Telling. Ambiguous Words. Ngram Viewer.

20 awesomely untranslatable words from around the world. Cliche Finder. Have you been searching for just the right cliché to use? Are you searching for a cliché using the word "cat" or "day" but haven't been able to come up with one? Just enter any words in the form below, and this search engine will return any clichés which use that phrase... Over 3,300 clichés indexed! What exactly is a cliche? See my definition Do you know of any clichés not listed here? Add some to the list! This is Morgan, creator of the Cliche Finder. Or, you might like my crazy passion project: Spanish for Nerds: Learning Spanish via Etymologies!

Back to cliches... if you would like to see some other Web sites about clichés? © S. Special thanks to Damien LeriAnd to Mike Senter Morgan's Web page. Visuwords™ online • Visual Dictionary, Visual Thesaurus. Danteworlds. Grammar and Spell Checker for Better English Communication - Ginger Software.

Grandiloquent Dictionary. This is the result of an ongoing project to collect and distribute the most obscure and rare words in the English language. It also contains a few words which do not have equivalent words in English. At present, the dictionary contains approximately 2700 words, though it is constantly growing. Following a large number of requests, pronounciations are now being (slowly) added to the listing, although it will be a long time before they are all added. After almost three years of work, the new Third Edition of the Grandiloquent Dictionary is now available as a PDF File. Including ~500 Words Not in the Online Version! In honour of ten years of the Grandiloquent Dictionary being available online, a special edition print version has been published!

The Author's Webpage You are visitor since this counter was added. Donate0 Donate0 Experimental Search The authors intend to eventually add a search box for searching this dictionary, but for the present we rely on a more general google search. Lexigram Addiction. My copyrite.