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Extensive list of homonyms from various sources. http://www.cooper.com |
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FAQ file by Mark Israel as of 29 September, 1997. http://www.faqs.org |
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Online publication of H.L. Mencken's "The American Language," written to look at the discrepancies between British and American English. http://www.bartleby.com/ |
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Asserts Canadian English emerged independent of American and British dialects. http://www.jkcc.com/ |
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Clarifies confusion about homonyms, misspellings, expressions, idioms, grammar and more. Supplies related links. http://www.wsu.edu/ |
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Covers pronunciation, vocabulary and place names of this city's unique dialect. http://www.boston-online.com/ |
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From the Dept. of Translation Studies, Univ. of Tampere, Finland. http://www.uta.fi/ |
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University College (London) researchers focusing on grammar and linguistics, plus world-wide usage. http://www.ucl.ac.uk |
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An indexed dictionary describing, in humorous fashion, the English dialect used in and around the Valleys of South Wales. http://talktidy.com/ |
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An organization of people determined to resist the abuse and misuse of English in the news media and elsewhere. http://www.mindspring.com |
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Collection of triple homonyms, like "to, too, two." http://www.triplehom.com |
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Anne H. Soukhanov, lexicographer, shows that abstract usage rules are not set in concrete. http://www.eei-alex.com |
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Contains a script that shows the frequency of a word in some text that is entered. http://www.georgetown.edu |
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History, origins, evolution and idiosyncrasies of English. New words and words in the news regularly featured. http://www.worldwidewords.org/ |
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