Monday, 24 July 2017



Oxford English Dictionary adds over 600 new expressions

The Oxford English Dictionary (Image: Wikipedia) The Oxford English Dictionary (Image: Wikipedia)
The Oxford English Dictionary has added over 600 new words, phrases and senses in its latest quarterly update.

"By the mid-20th century, 'woke' had been extended figuratively to refer to being 'aware' or 'well informed' in a political or cultural sense," the
Oxford English Dictionary (OED) said in a statement.

The use of "woke" by supporters of the Black Lives Matter movement -- an international activist movement that campaigns against violence and racism toward black people -- and in particular the phrase "stay woke", are thought to have introduced the word to a broader audience, especially on social media,
Xinhua news agency reported on Thursday.

"Post-truth" was the Oxford's 2016 word of the year. It was defined as "relating to or denoting circumstances in which objective facts are less influential in shaping political debate or public opinion than appeals to emotion and personal belief".

Besides, over 50 new words and 30 new senses related to tennis were added. "Tennis mom" and "tennis dad", for example, are now used to describe parents who actively and enthusiastically support their child's participation in the sport.
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The dictionary has also got a new end. "
Zyzzyva", a tropical weevil native to South America, is the new last in place of "zythum", a kind of malt beer brewed in ancient Egypt, which was the last alphabetic entry for a decade.

Meanwhile, the word "thing" now has a new sense defined as "a genuine or established phenomenon or practice used in questions conveying surprise or incredulity, such as 'how can that be a thing?'," said the OED, adding that the usage has been traced back to an early episode of television series "The West Wing".


In explanation of how a word qualifies for take-in, the OED said it "requires several independent examples of the word being used, and also evidence that the word has been in use for a reasonable amount of time."



Thousands of students in UP tune in to AIR to learn English

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/thumb/msid-59642365,width-400,resizemode-4/59642365.jpg
BIJNOR: Thousands of children studying in selected upper primary schools across Uttar Pradesh huddled together around radio sets on Monday morning to listen to All India Radio's show 'Aao Angrezi Sikhen' (let us learn English), an initiative of the state's education department and the public broadcaster to arrest the sinking standard of education in government schools.

The move aims to improve English of government school students, who lag behind their peers studying in public schools. Children of government schools in the northern hinterland also face difficulty in finding employment due to lack of knowledge of the language. Neighbouring Uttarakhand has already decided to shift the medium of instruction from Hindi to English in its schools.

Catching up with the changing trend, the
Lucknow centre of AIR started the broadcast of the 15-minute programme from Monday. It will be aired on alternate days — Monday, Wednesday and Friday — between 10.45am to 11am for students of class 6 to 8.

This initiative will be monitored by school authorities, which will send a report on it to the state government.