The big thinkers at Aperture reveal why many languages are disappearing and why it matters. FDA intends to put its most serious warning on COVID vaccines, sources say After winning his first Oscar, ...
The 2022 National Language Policy was fingered as the culprit for abysmal performance in public examinations; it was said to have “destroyed” the education system, as pupils and students often ...
Popular THC-infused drinks and edibles may disappear from store shelves in the next year as Congress is on the verge of passing a ban on nearly all hemp-derived THC, or tetrahydrocannabinol, products.
As I browse the web in 2025, I rarely encounter captchas anymore. There’s no slanted text to discern. No image grid of stoplights to identify. And on the rare occasion that I am asked to complete some ...
Salt marshes exist on every coast of the U.S., but these important wetlands are succumbing quickly to the effects of sea level rise caused by climate change. Grace Go of our journalism training ...
Global temperature rise may feel like it’s gradual, but the changes it brings can turn out to be sudden, massive, and self-reinforcing. These changes are what scientists call tipping points. When a ...
Kada Scott, 23, was last seen on Saturday at 9:45 p.m., according to police. A 23-year-old Philadelphia woman has now been missing for nearly a week, with police saying she was being harassed by an ...
Lately, Trump’s been sparking some particularly bizarre headlines. Between baselessly connecting Tylenol with autism, literally shutting down the U.S. government, and telling the U.S. Navy that ...
The Assinsg language replaces spoken words with sharp whistles that can carry for nearly three kilometres (two miles) in the mountains, according to researchers — Abdel Majid BZIOUAT In Morocco's High ...
- Whistle language 'disappearing' - It isn't just the villagers' migration to urban areas that has put the language at risk of vanishing. "The whistle language is disappearing little by little because ...
In Morocco's High Atlas mountains, shepherds Hammou Amraoui and his son hardly need words to speak. Across peaks, they whistle at each other in a centuries-old language, now jeopardised by rural ...