When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: expand my vocabulary with word of the day

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Vocabulary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vocabulary

    Vocabulary grows throughout one's life. Between the ages of 20 and 60, people learn about 6,000 more lemmas, or one every other day. [11] An average 20-year-old knows 42,000 lemmas coming from 11,100 word families. [11] People expand their vocabularies by e.g. reading, playing word games, and participating in vocabulary-related programs ...

  3. Vocabulary development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vocabulary_development

    By age 6, they have approximately 2,600 words of expressive vocabulary and 20,000–24,000 words of receptive vocabulary. [62] Some claim that children experience a sudden acceleration in word learning, upwards of 20 words per day, [58] but it tends to be much more gradual than this. From age 6 to 8, the average child in school is learning 6 ...

  4. American English vocabulary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_English_vocabulary

    American English has always shown a marked tendency to use nouns as verbs. [13] Examples of verbed nouns are interview, advocate, vacuum, lobby, pressure, rear-end, transition, feature, profile, spearhead, skyrocket, showcase, service (as a car), corner, torch, exit (as in "exit the lobby"), factor (in mathematics), gun ("shoot"), author (which disappeared in English around 1630 and was ...

  5. Lists of Merriam-Webster's Words of the Year - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_Merriam-Webster's...

    The Words of the Year usually reflect events that happened during the years the lists were published. For example, the Word of the Year for 2005, 'integrity', showed that the general public had an immense interest in defining this word amid ethics scandals in the United States government, corporations, and sports. [1]

  6. Most common words in English - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Most_common_words_in_English

    Some lists of common words distinguish between word forms, while others rank all forms of a word as a single lexeme (the form of the word as it would appear in a dictionary). For example, the lexeme be (as in to be ) comprises all its conjugations ( is , was , am , are , were , etc.), and contractions of those conjugations. [ 5 ]

  7. These Are the Best New Songs We Heard This Month - AOL

    www.aol.com/best-songs-heard-month-142900895.html

    We finally—finally—made it to the end of the year. And though the music releases have gone from summer’s deluge to a steady trickle, that doesn’t mean there aren’t some great new songs ...