It’s not just a mood—it’s in your blood. New research shows that your DNA determines whether you feel that "telltale tingle" from music and literature.
Reading can be one of the most difficult things that students learn to do, and it takes more than just amazing teachers and classroom-only solutions to make proficient readers.
Schools in Elizabethtown and LaRue County were among the 43 recipients of the 2026 Read to Achieve grants to assist struggling young readers.
On any given Monday, you'll find a gaggle of pre-schoolers attending Little Learners Collective, where students play with ...
Georgie and Hanan talk about why our brain can’t always remember words we know in a new language. Find more programmes to improve your English at bbclearningenglish.com. In this episode of our new ...
In a re-evaluation of Hockett's foundational features that have long dominated linguistic theory—concepts like "arbitrariness," "duality of patterning," and "displacement"—an international team of ...
Listen to one end of a phone conversation, and you’ll probably hear a rattle of ah’s, um’s and mm-hm’s. Our speech is brimming with these fillers, yet linguistic researchers haven’t paid much ...
A timeline of genetic changes in millions of years of human evolution shows that variants linked to higher intelligence appeared most rapidly around 500,000 years ago, and were closely followed by ...
Psychology of Language (LING 315) is an introductory course in psycholinguistics. Students learn to examine how language production and comprehension happen in the human mind. The course attracts many ...
ABSTRACT: With the widespread development of Internet, Internet buzzwords have attracted much attention in the field of linguistics. This paper aims to analyze both terminology-specific and ...