Social media round-up for June 10, 2016
- There’s quite a debate brewing about the Cornish language and its place in British culture. We read an argument that it’s essential on The Conversation.
- Earth Languages posted this story about the Athens Polytechnic Graffiti and the Subtle Power of Urban Art.
- We read on Slator about the HHS OKing machine translation if it’s reviewed by a qualified translator and then post edited if needed.
- We learned that a teacher mispronouncing a student’s name can have a lasting impact on PBS.
- Savage Chickens contemplated Welsh this week and it’s hilarious.
- We read a really interesting story on localization beyond language about, of all things, Walmart’s positioning in China. We all read the whole thing from Chinapost.
- Haven’t run across “text expansion” yet? We learned a lot more about it in this article on Business2Community.
- This is cool! An extinct language found a new audience at Yale (from Yale’s blog).
- Until this week we had never heard the term “franglais” and yet! Here’s a collection of the best franglais words from The Local France.
- You might have heard that Facebook introduced something called “DeepText”, which is a neural network which can understand language with near-human accuracy. Hashtag the future is now, right? From Metafilter.
- OUP Academic blog had a fascinating look at the history of slang as used by women. Highly recommended reading.
- And finally, BBC had this story on the oldest hand-written document in UK history which was found ‘at Roman London dig’.
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