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Love Linguage
United States
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 2 ม.ค. 2021
Let's learn about language (and personality theory, and accessibility, and whatever else I wanna teach you... but mostly about language and how everything relates to it)!
Nouns+
Video on noun types: th-cam.com/video/XJq6YHozmqc/w-d-xo.html
Schoolhouse Rock video on subjects and predicates: th-cam.com/video/JoZn12BEjyM/w-d-xo.html
CNN article on the Suez Canal: www.cnn.com/2021/03/25/middleeast/suez-canal-ship-blockage-intl-hnk/index.html
Schoolhouse Rock video on subjects and predicates: th-cam.com/video/JoZn12BEjyM/w-d-xo.html
CNN article on the Suez Canal: www.cnn.com/2021/03/25/middleeast/suez-canal-ship-blockage-intl-hnk/index.html
มุมมอง: 132
วีดีโอ
What the difference between speech and writing? Quick, short summary!
มุมมอง 17410 หลายเดือนก่อน
What the difference between speech and writing? Quick, short summary!
Social Dimension Scale & Language Variety
มุมมอง 15510 หลายเดือนก่อน
Social Dimension Scale & Language Variety
Grammarphobia - Launch of Grammar-based Series
มุมมอง 6610 หลายเดือนก่อน
Grammarphobia - Launch of Grammar-based Series
Clauses in English - Subject Verb Object
มุมมอง 8012 ปีที่แล้ว
Clauses in English - Subject Verb Object
Measuring Student Preference of Closed-Captioning Styles in Language Education
มุมมอง 1112 ปีที่แล้ว
Measuring Student Preference of Closed-Captioning Styles in Language Education
Linguistic Competence versus Performance
มุมมอง 7K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Linguistic Competence versus Performance
Speech Acts - Examining Compliments (in American English)
มุมมอง 7252 ปีที่แล้ว
Speech Acts - Examining Compliments (in American English)
Accuracy of Automated Closed-Captioning in Online Linguistics Lectures - Preliminary Results
มุมมอง 1223 ปีที่แล้ว
Accuracy of Automated Closed-Captioning in Online Linguistics Lectures - Preliminary Results
Where did "yeet" come from? A look at the complex history of this word.
มุมมอง 4.8K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Where did "yeet" come from? A look at the complex history of this word.
Racial Vine Comedy: What is Vine and what made it unique?!
มุมมอง 1463 ปีที่แล้ว
Racial Vine Comedy: What is Vine and what made it unique?!
Are Emojis a language? Emojis as a culturally-bound writing system.
มุมมอง 2433 ปีที่แล้ว
Are Emojis a language? Emojis as a culturally-bound writing system.
Emojis and Hashtags in Social and Political Activism
มุมมอง 1473 ปีที่แล้ว
Emojis and Hashtags in Social and Political Activism
What are we using ALL CAPS and aLteRnAtIng CaPs for?
มุมมอง 6773 ปีที่แล้ว
What are we using ALL CAPS and aLteRnAtIng CaPs for?
Introduction to Sociolinguistics: Culture and attitudes in language studies.
มุมมอง 3K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Introduction to Sociolinguistics: Culture and attitudes in language studies.
Shibboleths - Language & Group Membership
มุมมอง 1223 ปีที่แล้ว
Shibboleths - Language & Group Membership
Phonological and Phonemic Awareness (Phonology Part 5)
มุมมอง 1.1K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Phonological and Phonemic Awareness (Phonology Part 5)
This is spot on. 😂😂😂
Lol
Good🎉
Love the classics and I'm 41 lol still never gets old and I don't care ohh he's our shortstop lol
Unless there's a crime been committed This is the game the constitution provides I play No I'm not a "formal or politically correct" lawyer or representative I'm a common soul like the rest of us, unless there is a crime
What you're saying is a typical couple's argument. It's hilarious.
This was genius ♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️
I can see a shift if people were to say no cap to ridicule its usage as being useless in figuring out the truth of a situation. I'm not sure this is the best scene to demonstrate that though. It seems to have a comical point but whether what Deadpool is saying is true or not isn't the focal point of the humor as much as the strangeness of the lingo. Still interesting to imagine no cap being used ironically though. I don't think it's beyond possibility for sure
So good
A Classic!
NEVER gets old!😂
The Oxford English Dictionary (OED) has an entry for the verb yeet that is now obsolete, and is only recorded in the Middle English period (1150-1500). The OED's only evidence for yeet is from 1440, in Promptorium Parvulorum.
Ti-Moe-they Pre-Sent. He got it right the first time around.
Wow! It's crazy this video even exists! It Atlanta, we'd been saying "Yeet!" since about 1996. It was definitely an exclamation whether it was throwing something or expressing excitement. Definitely not for dancing in 1996. Our dances still had full names ((Bank head Bounce, Butterfly, Tootsie Roll, etc...). "Yeet" was an exclamation comparable to "Oh yeah!" Like the Kool-Aid Man. It was confirming excitement in something said or done. We would yell "YEET!" when throwing something. In the South, 9/10 you're throwing rocks and if you live near still water, you're skipping stones. That's when my friends and I said it the most. It was never called "yeeting" but I guess it became known as that was the battlecry
Key and Peele, so good. Watch all the shows in full. Continental Breakfast is a great one.
A-a-ron present!
"pre-sent"
Great Lecture. Greetings from Ecuador (South America)
He just laughs because he doesn’t want to answer the truthfully 😂
No he blew them off hahaha
I don't know he looks real pretty maybe he did beat them off.😅😅😅
knowing Hollywood... yes, he probably did, and quite a lot at that
Apparently she understood how the Hollywood industry worked well before the weinstein situation become public.
She absolutely doubled down 😂
God bless her 😂
Dang this dude is British bro was convincing af
First it was childish ,but the second part just made it insane.
.. eraser vs. rubber..
Well, I’m glad the term “bumping clams,” means the same thing in the UK as it does everywhere else around the world. Maybe 🤔 in Bikini Bottom it’s different tho.
Ok is she clueless as to what she's actually saying. How embarrassing for her.. SMH
And the male co-host just sat there and watched him squirm with that smile that says "Hey--I'm not going to be the one who tells her. That's *YOUR* cue!!"
The tag line for "Payback" [A Mel Gibson film] was "It's time to Root for the bad guy." That had to be changed for the poster in Australia. "Root" when you're Down Under means to get laid. It became "It's time to _cheer_ for the bad guy." Parlance matters.
Aye yo pause
I'm guessing that "beat him off" hadn't made it across the pond 😂
Someone needs to tell her!
I hope these are all their comments today lol, I don't use instagram but I imagine that is funny.
Well explained
This lecture was really helpful, thank you! Also, don't feel bad about the stuttering with pluralization and coercion because I just found it endearing lol. Goes to show that English is hard for Americans too.
This is the comedy people keep telling me to watch lol?
The show has a good storyline and I usually do not laugh out loud to any show but this one( especially the mom) had me in tears
Its on the more clever end of TV comedy shows. Not my favorite but my mom dad and sister loved it
Thank you for golden information.
Thank you for golden information.
Excellent video. Thanks, Dr. Miller! The comparison of valencies between copular and regular verbs was very helpful, as was the distinction between complements and adjuncts.
They(S) dance(V) beautifully(Adv). "They dance" by itself is a full sentence, so I think only the subject is required, making "dance" a monovalent and intransitive verb. "Beautifully" modifies "dance" but is not required by syntax. The dance(S) was (V) beautiful(Adj). I think all 3 parts of this sentence are required, because "was" is linking the subject to a word that describes the subject, which is its role as a copular verb. This sentence wouldn't make sense without all of the parts together.
Great work!!
I pronounce it "presentation" /s
you are wrong, said the spanish guy lol, but i thonk u are wrong, i have never heard womeone say that
Unlike the way you pronounce.. from Pakistan
In va, but I’m from northern Jersey, I’ve heard it both ways but most consistently with the short e.
You are correct. It mostly does have a lot of things to do with regional dialects. 👍 Same thing with the word “economics” the first vowel being pronounced /i/ or /ɛ/, like with “presentation.”
I feel like I've heard it both ways but I say it like the highschoolers in his example. And I am from the Midwest, USA.