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Προβολή αναρτήσεων από Νοέμβριος, 2020

How to Read a Dictionary Entry - Meriam Webster Dictionaries

Εικόνα
  Word Matters Podcast Episode 17: How to Read a Dictionary Entry How to Read a Dictionary Entry When you read a definition, what do you see? Is one meaning of a word more important than another? Who decides this, anyway? Join us for a deep dive into the myths and mysteries of the dictionary. Download the episode  here . Transcript (intro music – “Build Something Beautiful” by Tobias Voigt) (teaser clip) Peter Sokolowski: If you read an entry that has definitions in historical order, you're actually kind of reading the biography of the word. This is where it started. This is where it got its education. This is where it got married. (music break) Emily Brewster: Coming up on Word Matters, some dictionary demystification. I'm Emily Brewster, and Word Matters is produced by Merriam-Webster in collaboration with New England Public Media. On each episode, Merriam- Webster editors Neil Serven, Ammon Shea, Peter Sokolowski, and I explore some aspect of the English language, from the d

Received Pronunciation

Εικόνα
  Listen to the recording at  https://www.bl.uk/british-accents-and-dialects/articles/received-pronunciation Article written by: Jonnie Robinson Themes: Diverse voices: varieties of English in the UK ,  Received Pronunciation Published: 24 Apr 2019 Variously referred to as the ‘Queen’s English’, ‘BBC English’ or ‘Oxford English’, Received Pronunciation, or RP for short, is the accent usually described as typically British. Find out more about its origins and its current status in the UK. RP: a social accent of English Received Pronunciation , or  RP  for short, is the instantly recognisable accent often described as ‘typically British’. Popular terms for this accent, such as ‘the Queen’s English’, ‘Oxford English’ or ‘BBC English’ are all a little misleading. The Queen, for instance, speaks an almost unique form of English, while the English we hear at Oxford University or on the BBC is no longer restricted to one type of accent. RP is an  accent , not a  dialect , since all RP speaker