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September's Word for Wednesday theme is school.
So far, we’ve looked at the words semester, teacher, pupil, and uniform. Our final word for September is exam.
An exam is a formal set of questions or exercises that evaluate a particular skill or knowledge. In schools, exams are often set at the end of a term or a year to assess a student’s progress.
Exam has been used as an abbreviation for examination since 1848, when it was a slang word used by college students.
Examination comes from the Old French ‘examinacion’, from the Latin ‘examinare’ meaning ‘to ponder’ or ‘to consider’. The word took on ...
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The English language is constantly evolving in creative ways and this has always been the case. This month we started a new blog feature on slang words and their plain English meanings. Our first post in this new series looks at Cockney rhyming slang.
We returned to our Commonly Confused Words series with a very similar-sounding pair of words—allusion and illusion. Do you know when to use which word? Visit the blog for memory devices to help you tell them apart.
For our Idioms article we looked at figurative expressions about fruit.
We continued with the fruit theme in July’s Word for Wednesday posts. Did you know the word ...
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Welcome to our new blog feature on slang words!
The English language is constantly evolving in creative ways, and this has always been the case. In these articles we will look at slang words and share their plain English meanings.
Cockney rhyming slang originates from the East End of London – the traditional definition of a Cockney is someone who is born within hearing distance of Bow Bells.
In this dialect, words are replaced with rhyming phrases. However, the rhyming word from the phrase is often omitted when spoken.
For example:
‘Barnet’ is short for ‘hair’ from the phrase ‘Barnet fair’.
He needs to get that barnet ...
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Over the year, a few of our blog posts have mentioned words that derive from people or fictional characters: ‘quixotic’ from Don Quixote, ‘malapropism’ from Mrs Malaprop, ‘puckish’ from Puck, ‘July and August’ from Julius and Augustus Caesar, and many more.
This week I thought I’d take a look at Charles Dickens, the famous nineteenth-century author, after whom the word ‘Dickensian’ was coined. The Oxford English Dictionary defines ‘Dickensian’ as an adjective used to describe something that is ‘reminiscent of the novels of Charles Dickens, especially in suggesting the poor social conditions or comically re...
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