Patrick CoxThe World in Words focuses on language. We cover everything from bilingual education to the globalization of English to untranslatable foreign phrases. You’ll learn how to insult someone in Icelandic, among other things. Hosted by The World’s Patrick Cox.

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The World in Words


The Voice of Iran in Spanish

Hispan TV

The Chinese and Russian government-run TV companies have fast-growing foreign language services. Now, Iran has got in on the act. It has launched Hispan TV, a Spanish language service aimed at Latin America.

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Inventing a Word for a Facebook Relationship

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Podcast: Asking your Facebook friends to invent a tenuous Facebook relationship.

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Fear of the Foreign, Hospital English, and Garifuna Music

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Some US presidential candidates seem embarrassed by their ability to speak a foreign language. Also, a hospital trains foreign nurses in local idioms like “I want to spend a penny.” And, a musician sings famous English language songs in Garifuna.

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Up Close With Language Super Learners

The latest World in Words podcast continues a conversation with Michael Erard about his new book, Babel No More: The Search for the World’s Most Extraordinary Language Learners.

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The Road to Hyperpolyglottery with Michael Erard

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A new book investigates language super-learners and their “will to plasticity”.

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Bolt, Crook and Payne: What’s in A Name?

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Usain Bolt bolts, Anna Smashnova was a tennis pro, Bob Flowerdew is a gardening expert. Coincidence?

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Killing Off a Metaphor With a Fresh Coat of Paint

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A paint job on Scotland’s Forth Bridge is declared complete, and so a metaphor loses out.

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Retweeting Bad Grammar

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Is it wise to correct other people’s typos, misspellings and grammatical errors when retweeting?

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A Right Brain Religion Translated into a Left Brain Language

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Do the Bible’s roots in Ancient Hebrew and Ancient Greek mean that it combines right and left brain thinking?

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A Dubious Award for the Squeezed Middle

More squeezed every day?

‘Squeezed middle’ beats out ‘occupy’, ‘Arab Spring’ and ‘tiger mother’ to win the OED’s word of the year

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Podcast: Australia Through its Languages

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In this week’s World in Words podcast, a conversation with three Australians about language, culture and history. Thomas Keneally, Deborah Cheetham and Kate Grenville discuss the myths and secrets of Aboriginal languages, the rhetoric of official apologies, and the magnificent prose of legendary bush ranger Ned Kelly.

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Oh My Lady Gaga, and Other Linguistic Exchanges

Lady Gaga (Wikimedia Commons)

Hengeilivable! Nonsensical English words and phrases are all the rage among young Chinese.

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Translators Past, Present and Future

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Why human translators aren’t afraid of machine translators. Also, a history of translation, and a new novel that draws on The Iliad.

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Corporate Spelling Experiments and Fear of a Chinese-Speaking Planet

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Corporations love to tinker with spelling, often with disastrous consequences. Also, a film explores fears about Chinese.

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Does the Language You Speak Determine How Much Money You Save?

Behavioral Economist Keith Chen (Photo: Audrey Quinn)

A controversial new study out of Yale concludes that people who speak languages without future verb tenses like Chinese are better at preparing for the future than people who use a future tense like in English, French, and Spanish for example.

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