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Wordle Player Cheat Sheet: Here Are the Most Popular Letters Used in the English Language
CNET· 3 days agoThere are plenty of different ways to play Wordle, The New York Times' engaging online word-guessing...
Looking Out: What's popping between cultures, guests
Gannett via AOL· 6 hours agoHe told them, in English, that he was a wealthy cattle rancher from Texas, even though the closest he had been to Texas was Lake Michigan...him was part...
One word sparks forth many meanings
U-T San Diego· 24 hours agoDEAR RICHARD: The word buck has nine different definitions as presented in dictionary.com. What words in the English language are like ...
To vs. Too: Clarifying Commonly Confused Words
HowStuffWorks via Yahoo News· 5 days agoNo need to bust out the dictionary! We've got you covered with the difference between "too" and "to." Jamie ... Images Do you know when to use to vs....
Letters & Legends – making the words work feature
Mod DB· 6 days agoEffectively, what happens in the game is this: every time the player (or the enemy, although this is less important for reasons that may become obvious...
Arts Calendar: Happenings for the Week of April 28
The Wall Street Journal· 4 hours agoJerry Seinfeld cooks up his directorial debut with a comedy about Pop-Tarts, Dua Lipa embraces ‘Radical Optimism,’ Frieze headlines an art-filled week in...
13 Common Things You Never Knew Had Actually Hilarious Real Names
AOL· 4 days agoThe English language is full of words for things you see all the time but have never managed to put a name to. Your arm makes its journey through the sleeve, but without the ...
Generation Alpha Slang: 10 Terms That Will Help You Show More Rizz
Mentalfloss· 4 days agoWhile certain terms come from streaming platforms like YouTube and Twitch, a lot of them actually...
The BBC is blinded by its bias against GB News
Daily Telegraph· 2 days agoRobinson and Rajan, in their passionate quest to be impartial (clearly anything but when it comes to podcasts slamming GB News), may actually be right....
Word of the Day: propound
New York Times· 3 days agoIn plain (if occasionally plodding) English, Butler, who uses they/them pronouns, repeatedly affirms that facts do exist, that biology does exist, that plenty of people undoubtedly ...