News

As the case against nurse Lucy Letby dwindles from slam-dunk certainty to shifting doubt, it is surely time to look again at ...
Indiana Fever guard Sophie Cunningham told reporters she needed to start scoring more. Last night, she delivered. Instrumental in the Fever's 99- ...
Violent incidents targeting ICE and Border Patrol received limited network coverage, with CBS and PBS offering brief reports ...
Amidst the dismay and recrimination that currently occupy Democrats, an active discussion is taking place around a new theory ...
When I was growing up, there were only two pronouns to describe oneself: she and he. As for gender, you checked a box, male ...
Words frequently used by ChatGPT, including “delve” and “meticulous,” are getting more common in spoken language, according ...
Semicolon use is down, and its slide is making headlines. In the U.S., these punctuation marks are appearing in published ...
In 'Mor than Words,' author John Warner clearly lays out why he believes that using large language models like ChatGPT is not ...
So, we’ve all been there. You’re two paragraphs into a blog post. The headline was catchy enough, the intro kind of made ...
The demise of the English paper will end a long intellectual tradition, but it’s also an opportunity to reëxamine the purpose ...
In a sign of the AI times, columnist and author June Casagrande asks ChatGPT to write a grammar book inspired by her style.
The slur, which has been used to discriminate against people with disabilities, is finding popularity online again. But its implications are bigger than one word, experts say.