Can i has awesomes




















According to a study by Lancaster University and Cambridge University Press, Britain has all but abandoned the former adjective in favour of the latter. Early evidence from their project, the Spoken British National Corpus , shows that "awesome" now turns up in conversation 72 times per million words.

That's "cheerio" meaning goodbye, young people, as opposed to the singular form of the breakfast cereal, which you would only tend to use if you got one stuck up your nose. The study is the linguistic equivalent of that regularly updated shopping basket they use to determine the Retail Price Index: out goes whale meat and suspenders, in comes SIM cards and hummus. They aren't like-for-like substitutions, just signifiers of a fast-changing culture.

The project is now calling on people to send in MP3s of their conversations — they'll even pay a small amount — in order to gain a wider sense of how the language as it is spoken has changed over the years. Looking over the current list, it's obvious why some of these words have fallen from grace. People don't utter the word "Walkman" much any more for the same reason they hardly ever say "locomotive". Learn more. Build a culture of continuous learning and engage learners like never before.

Design awesome learning experiences you can adapt to any training setting. We help you make work feel like play. Passionate about improving education and making learning awesome for students and teaches worldwide! Deliver training, presentations, meetings and events in-person or on any video conferencing platform. Enhance learning with playful pedagogy and a powerful toolkit. Make learning awesome for the entire family! Learn more Buy now. It only takes minutes to create a learning game or trivia quiz on any topic, in any language.

Host a live game with questions on a big screen or share a game with remote players. Game on! Photo by National Park Service. Without bats, say goodbye to bananas, avocados and mangoes. Over species of fruit depend on bats for pollination. Bats help spread seeds for nuts, figs and cacao — the main ingredient in chocolate. Just like a hummingbird, the lesser long-nosed bat can hover at flowers, using its 3-inch-long tongue — equal to its body length — to feed on nectar in desert environments.

Photo by Merlin D. Tuttle, Bat Conservation International. Night insects have the most to fear from bats. Each night, bats can eat their body weight in insects, numbering in the thousands! This insect-heavy diet helps foresters and farmers protect their crops from pests. The endangered Indiana bat, which weighs about three pennies, consumes up to half its bulk every evening. Bats are the only flying mammal.

While the flying squirrel can only glide for short distances, bats are true fliers. This flexible skin membrane that extends between each long finger bone and many movable joints make bats agile fliers. California leaf-nosed bats exit a cave at Joshua Tree National Park. You can easily distinguish these bats by their leaf-like noses and large ears.

How fast a bat flies depends on the species, but they can reach speeds over miles per hour according to new research. Over 15 million bats live there, making it the largest known bat colony and largest concentration of mammals on Earth.

Conservation efforts are helping bat species recover. At least 12 types of U. These amazing animals face a multitude of threats including habitat loss and disease, but we're working to change that.

A unique international conservation partnership in the southwestern U. In , there were thought to be fewer than 1, bats at the 14 known roosts range wide. There are now an estimated , bats at 75 roosts!



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