Learning another language is one of the deepest and most human things one can possibly do, writes Douglas Hofstadter.
What would a person in Revolutionary America sound like? Early letters, documents, and diaries help us listen in.
By feeding centuries-old nursery rhymes and folklore recordings into their own model, linguists in Louisiana hope to help a ...
Take a multimedia tour of four still-functioning agricultural heirlooms — some of which predate the country’s founding ...
Lerner & Loewe’s glorious, evergreen musical My Fair Lady – with an overflowing bouquet of ravishing songs including The Rain in Spain, I Could Have Danced All Night, With a Little Bit of Luck and ...
State law requires districts to provide language support services to students, but how those services look is different from ...
SocGholish uses traffic distribution systems (TDSs) to provide initial access into victims' networks for cybercrime groups ...
USIM program once used to teach airline pilots aviation English is being used at the university level and adapted for general ...
As part of a collaboration between the Poetry Society of America and Babbel, 1,500 poets and poetry lovers weighed in on the most beautiful word in the English language, crowning "diaphanous." ...
When Congress strengthened Title III in the early 2000s, the focus was helping students acquire English and access academic content. That goal remains important, but the classrooms of 2026 look very ...
JavaScript is the heartbeat of the modern web. If you’ve ever felt frustrated by certain web pages that just don’t seem to work, the culprit might be that JavaScript is disabled in your browser. This ...
A new study of bilingual speakers suggests that a single “grammatical engine” in the brain can power multiple languages at once.