News

Hemingway’s advice isn’t just for novelists, but for anyone who writes. Journalists, marketers, copywriters, and even the ...
Reconnecting with purpose doesn’t require a big mission. Through small, daily choices aligned with your values, you can live ...
The “yes, but” approach is a two-part form of self-assertion. First, there is the “yes” part, the acknowledgment and ...
An NYU team uses machine learning to analyze neural activity data and uncover how speech is produced. In a recent paper ...
Learning with TOI News: Mastering adjectives and adverbs is crucial for vivid and engaging writing. Many students struggle with this concept, leading to awkward prose and und ...
VICE-PRESIDENT Jagdeo, in his last press conference, remarked that: “This country got some really stupid people.” Mr Jagdeo did not use the adverb, “extraordinarily,” which is most appropriate. If you ...
Do nonhuman animals live in a kind of eternal present, or are they aware of the passage of time? That question has been debated by scientists for decades. Most experts agree that animals have some way ...
That Casimir Markievicz exhibition (Diary, April 23rd) reminded me in passing how dependent the upper classes of these islands used to be on what grammarians call “degree adverbs”. Witness a ...
A Word, Please: Beefing over how we use hyphens and adverbs Dry-aged steaks for sale at inside a restaurant refrigerator.
Philip Moyer says his stint at Amazon was one of the most impactful of his career, in part due to the company’s emphasis on customers over shareholders.
Never in our modern political history has so much seemed to depend on the meaning and interpretation of one word.