Word History of the Week: Ye
Welcome again to The Word of the Week! This edition, we’re going back in time to visit Ye Olde Word Facts. If you think of restaurant trying to seem quaint and English, the first...
Write Gooder, not Better
Welcome again to The Word of the Week! This edition, we’re going back in time to visit Ye Olde Word Facts. If you think of restaurant trying to seem quaint and English, the first...
For our first session of The Editing Cycle, we are going to focus on fiction, more specifically, on sentence structure.
Once a controversial figure banned from student libraries, Mark Twain has been called the greatest American author ever to have lived. His novels can be found in literature classrooms around the world…if they’re not...
Petula was completely taken in by Clark’s blandiloquence. blandiloquence (noun) blæn-DIL-ê-kwens 1. Smooth talk, flattery.
When we hear world literature, the first thing which appears on our mind is the diversity of languages and culture and history inscribed on the pieces’ text and context. Taking this note aside, world...
I can hear you even now, reader mind, declaring that a proser could never be a poet! That said forms are wildly different! That hysteria is fun! I joke, but we do all know...
If there’s one thing we can say about our fellow writers, it is that we’re readers first. Every day, members of the Young Writers’ Society are privileged to the works created by our friends...
Mokkye Market by Shin Kyŏng-Nim The sky urges me to turn into a cloud, the earth urges me to turn into a breeze, a little breeze waking weeds on the ferry landing once storm clouds...
Five Ways to Make Research Fun (And Hopefully More Productive…) Research. Some of us thrive off of it. Some of us avoid it like the plague. Some of us even use it to procrastinate....