Averil Coxhead from the School of Linguistics and Applied Language Studies developed and evaluated The Academic Word List (AWL) for her MA thesis. This list is a very useful resource for English for Academic Purposes teachers and learners.
In general, use the closed form of compound words and words with prefixes; that is, write them without a space or a hyphen. We've included some common examples of the closed form in the word list, such as dataset, metadata, and predefined, as well as our exceptions for well-established terms that commonly use a hyphen or a space, such as multi-region and style sheet. Additionally, in cases where the noun, verb, and adjective versions of a word are treated differently, we explicitly note the differences.
As always, it's fine to deviate from this guidance if that serves your readers better. For example, if you determine that the hyphenated version of a term in your domain is more appropriate for your readers, it's fine to use that instead. We acknowledge that sometimes there are competing forms of the same word in wide use, especially as new terms emerge, and you might have good reasons for deviating from our guidance. Use the same term consistently throughout your document.
A user authenticates their identity by entering their password (or giving some other proof of identity). The authenticated user then authorizes the client app to send an authorized request to the server on the user's behalf.
I can't imagine I'm the first to notice, but thought I should share. I went into the source code for Wordle to copy the word list it uses. The list appeared to be in a random order so I looked up the most recent word, PANIC, and saw that all the words preceding it were the previous days' answers in order. Basically, if you download the word list, you have the answer for all future Wordles in order.
Good call!
Besides passphrase source is English (not native for many users) only, the words are quite long and complex.
So even if your proficient in English, mistyping due to stress, lack of attention, or small screen/keyboard will happen quite often.
@tgreer: Maybe Bitwarden could (optionally) enable short / common English words in a quick first step? I think this would help and cost less effort.
I would like to have the option to choose between more than one language dictionary and to mix the chosen ones into a single passphrase. For example : 1 Spanish word + 1 French word + 2 English word + 1 German word.
* If you require the word number of 16AUG2014 (i.e. 4), then this is a little more difficult as I don't think there's a string function for this in SAS. It would involve using a combination of COUNT and %SUBSTR.
The gpt response always fails to stick to the word list. It is a long word list, from which hundreds of coherent sentences can be made. I am aware this is something openai struggles with, but I wondered if there is a type of prompt that can help.
Thanks
The PGP Word List ("Pretty Good Privacy word list", also called a biometric word list for reasons explained below) is a list of words for conveying data bytes in a clear unambiguous way via a voice channel. They are analogous in purpose to the NATO phonetic alphabet used by pilots, except a longer list of words is used, each word corresponding to one of the 256 distinct numeric byte values.
The PGP Word List was designed in 1995 by Patrick Juola, a computational linguist, and Philip Zimmermann, creator of PGP.[1][2] The words were carefully chosen for their phonetic distinctiveness, using genetic algorithms to select lists of words that had optimum separations in phoneme space. The candidate word lists were randomly drawn from Grady Ward's Moby Pronunciator list as raw material for the search, successively refined by the genetic algorithms. The automated search converged to an optimized solution in about 40 hours on a DEC Alpha, a particularly fast machine in that era.
The list is actually composed of two lists, each containing 256 phonetically distinct words, in which each word represents a different byte value between 0 and 255. Two lists are used because reading aloud long random sequences of human words usually risks three kinds of errors: 1) transposition of two consecutive words, 2) duplicate words, or 3) omitted words. To detect all three kinds of errors, the two lists are used alternately for the even-offset bytes and the odd-offset bytes in the byte sequence. Each byte value is actually represented by two different words, depending on whether that byte appears at an even or an odd offset from the beginning of the byte sequence. The two lists are readily distinguished by the number of syllables; the even list has words of two syllables, the odd list has three. The two lists have a maximum word length of 9 and 11 letters, respectively. Using a two-list scheme was suggested by Zhahai Stewart.
Each byte in a bytestring is encoded as a single word. A sequence of bytes is rendered in network byte order, from left to right. For example, the leftmost (i.e. byte 0) is considered "even" and is encoded using the PGP Even Word table. The next byte to the right (i.e. byte 1) is considered "odd" and is encoded using the PGP Odd Word table. This process repeats until all bytes are encoded. Thus, "E582" produces "topmost Istanbul", whereas "82E5" produces "miser travesty".
I have some bulleted (and numbered) lists that I would like to prevent from being split across multiple pages. Rather than have the splitting occur, I would like to have Word automatically put in a page break and start the list on the second page. Is this possible?
This section provides clarification of words and phrases used in ASU communications. It includes exceptions to AP Style. This list is a living document that will be of greater benefit with your contributions. If there is a word or phrase you see frequently misused, or that you frequently look up, please share your insights.
Who doesn't love a list? Lists can keep you organized, or help you collect your ideas, or propel you forward on a plan. Take your list making to the next level with easy-to-use templates that you can customize for your exact listing needs. Use lists to keep track of your favorite hobbies and interests so you never run out of supplies or miss an opportunity to explore. Or deploy your favorite list template to keep track of who's naughty and who's nice when it comes time for celebrating an occasion. From brainstorming your next big idea to organizing your busy life, you can make the perfect list for you when you start with a customizable template.
In Microsoft Word, you can edit the list levels to organize your numbered/bulleted lists and outlines. You can even custom-build a multilevel list by formatting each list level to meet your preferences.
SCOWL (Spell Checker Oriented Word Lists) and Friends is a database ofinformation on English words useful for creating high-quality wordlists suitable for use in spell checkers of most dialects of English.The database primary contains information on how common a word is,differences in spelling between the dialects if English, spellingvariant information, and (basic) part-of-speech and inflectioninformation.
SCOWL itself is a compilation of the information in the database intoa set of simple word lists that can be combined to create spellerdictionaries of various sizes and dialects (American, British (both-ise and -ize), Canadian and Australian).
A simple web app is also available to check if a word is inSCOWL. This app also assigns a scorethat indicates if a word should or should not be considered forinclusion based on its frequency in Google Book's corpus (1980-2008).In addition, a report sorted byfrequency is available that alsolooks for similar more common words to help determine if adding theless common word might cause a problem.
The 2of12id.txt file, in the alternativeversion of 12Dicts, is the primary source of part-of-speech andinflection information, however it is limited to common words.AGID contains more words but also likely to containmore errors.
I am volunteering with children whose primary language at home is not English. We are using the sight words but also would like to work with helping them make sentences with these words. Do you have any handouts which would help? Thank you, Margaret
Take a look at the Research Bibliography section of our Sight Words Introduction page. We have listed several books and articles that have informed the development of our sight words teaching strategies.
Thank you so much for these resources. My 10 yr. old twins (Jalen and Jaden) are now able to recognize simple words and read them. With continuing practices every evening, I hope to introduce them to more words. Again, thank you!!
This question is for everyone. Is there another series of site words for third graders? I am looking for the next 1000 most frequently used words for a third grader. Thanks for any suggestions.
Charlton
Hello,
Does the list that says 1st imply those are the ones to master in 1st grade? Or am I misinterpreting this list. If this is true, what is expected to be mastered in Kindergarten?
Thank you,
Tiffany
In the present article, we introduce the Nencki Affective Word List (NAWL), created in order to provide researchers with a database of 2,902 Polish words, including nouns, verbs, and adjectives, with ratings of emotional valence, arousal, and imageability. Measures of several objective psycholinguistic features of the words (frequency, grammatical class, and number of letters) are also controlled. The database is a Polish adaptation of the Berlin Affective Word List-Reloaded (BAWL-R; Võ et al., Behavior Research Methods 41:534-538, 2009), commonly used to investigate the affective properties of German words. Affective normative ratings were collected from 266 Polish participants (136 women and 130 men). The emotional ratings and psycholinguistic indexes provided by NAWL can be used by researchers to better control the verbal materials they apply and to adjust them to specific experimental questions or issues of interest. The NAWL is freely accessible to the scientific community for noncommercial use as supplementary material to this article.
760c119bf3