Stumped for today’s ‘Wordle’? We’ve got you covered with hints and the final solution to the ‘New York Times’ game.
According to Merriam-Webster, "rejuvenate" is intended for mature audiences. TEMPLE, Texas — The first Word of the Day in the ...
The incoming president blames the "woke culture" for undermining America’s strength. He claims our military doesn’t want to ...
West Virginia’s Republican Gov. Jim Justice, our wandering Webster’s Dictionary of empty, golly-gee colloquialisms, has ...
The 2 Johnnies return with an update on the sensational 'GAA Catfish' story, eager to "ignite a crucial conversation" and ...
The Local Epicurean opened last month in East Lansing, offering artisan pasta, wine, cocktails and cooking classes.
LAST week in this column, the phrase "greener pastures" – an idiom that means a better or more promising situation ...
Colorado had some major plot twists. From Russell Wilson leaving the Denver Broncos to a mysterious monolith, many ...
What is a new English word you learned in 2023? Last year, the American publisher Merriam-Webster introduced 690 new words to its dictionary, ranging from the fictional slang term “padawan” to ...
Manifesting freedom from brain rot’ and other attempts to encase our aspirations in words” FOR several years now, at yearend, ...
Samuel Gilbert and Edward Hensley died at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School more than a century ago. The struggle for ...
She ate." Cap/No cap: To "cap" means to "lie, to boast, or to front," according to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary (although this meaning hasn't officially made it yet). "No cap" means you are ...