Sudan: A Coward’s Revenge
The quiet and cowardly way that Sudan chose to restart the genocide.
The quiet and cowardly way that Sudan chose to restart the genocide.
A first-hand report from Yankee’s spring training.
A look at the origins of Parkinson’s Disease.
This week’s word is: Rashomon.
On the importance of a newspaper dateline.
Michelle looks at the way books connect us personally.
What Rebecca has been reading.
Gordon Thompson looks at The Beatles.
Ammon Shea shares his love of obituaries.
A look at the best baseball training site.
The podictionary word is “stew.”
Professor Chris Mallin highlights the volume of rights issues coming to the market and the corporate governance implications for investors, both institutional and private.
The myths behind Shakespeare’s women.
Will the economy effect the baseball spring training business model?
Long ago I wrote a column with the title “Tit for Tat.” Engl. tip for tap also existed at one time. Words like tip, tap, top, tick, tack, tock, tit, tat, tot, as well as those with voiced endings like tid– (compare tidbit), tad, and tod (“bush; fox”), are ideal candidates for sound imitative coinages.
An excerpt from Free Speech: A Very Short Introduction by Nigel Warburton.