www.luntacunt.fora.pl

Luntacunt project

www.luntacunt.fora.pl Forum Index -> Genre -> published in the journal Nature Climate Change
Post new topic  Reply to topic View previous topic :: View next topic 
published in the journal Nature Climate Change
PostPosted: Mon 23:48, 23 Sep 2013
cheapbag214s

 
Joined: 27 Jun 2013
Posts: 20570
Read: 0 topics

Warns: 0/5
Location: England





reveals that the Web has not only wholly altered the English language, but has turned us into a culture of misspellers. “The increasing use of variant spellings on the internet has been brought about by people typing at speed in chat rooms and on social networking sites where the general attitude is that there isn’t a need to correct typo’s or conform to spelling rules,” the paper says, meaning our attitude toward grammar has become increasingly lenient. But the real harm in a commonplace Web speak shorthand? If correct grammar continues on a path to irrelevancy, children won’t bother to correct themselves,[url=http://www.ocosound.com/]Christian Louboutin Sale[/url], let alone learn it in the first place.More on NewsFeed: Average Teen Texts 3339 Times A MonthThe study, which focused in on the burgeoning Internet generation reported that one in five 18-to-24 year-olds say they would not feel confident enough to write an important e-mail without a dictionary or spell checker acting as an aid, a scary stat seeing as this is the just the tip of the population who can’t remember a time before computers. Though nearly a third of the those surveyed for the study claimed that alt-spellings common in Internet chatter are “completely unacceptable,” the other two-thirds expressed support for these rebel words to be included in the dictionary. “Accurate spelling is of the utmost importance, but from this most recent survey we can conclude that the unprecedented reach and scale of the internet has given rise to new social practices and it is now an agent in spelling change,” Jack Bovill, Chair of the English Spelling Society,[url=http://www.ocosound.com/]Christian Louboutin Discount[/url], said in the paper.Maybe grammar could use a reboot.(via The Independent)Study: Heat in New York Can Change the Weather in SiberiaSaul Loeb / AFP / Getty ImagesA new study suggests hot weather in metropolitan areas like New York could be causing warmer temperatures in distant regions like northern Canada.RelatedUrban Heat May Warm Faraway Places National Geographic NewsUrban Heat Has Large-scale Climate Effects Scripps Institution of Oceanography / University of California, San DiegoHeat Island Effect United States Environmental Protection Agency'Bingo!' Wasted energy from cities explains a global warming mystery NBC NewsEnergy consumption and the unexplained winter warming over northern Asia and North America Nature Climate ChangeEmailPrintShareFacebookTwitterTumblrLinkedInStumbleUponRedditDiggMixxDeliciousGoogle+Comment Follow @timenewsfeedThe heat produced by in cities like New York and San Francisco may be contributing to warming in areas up to 1,000 miles away, according to National Geographic News.Scientists have long been familiar with the “urban island heat effect,” which generally leads to higher temperatures in cities than in suburban and rural areas.(MORE: The Scariest Environmental Fact in the World)However, according to a new study from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego, the heat generated by cities in the Northern Hemisphere is altering the jet stream – a current of air high above the surface of the Earth – and other major atmospheric systems, resulting in an increase in winter temperatures of up to 1.8°F (1°C) in faraway rural areas.According to the new models, air rising off of urban areas can interfere with the jet stream, allowing warmer air from the Equator to flow farther north, according to National Geographic News.(MORE: Federal Forecast for Climate Change: It’s Getting Hot in Here“The changed circulation is thought to have an opposite effect in Europe, causing a cooling effect that amounts to 1.8°F (1°C), experienced mostly in the fall,http://www.ocosound.com/,” NBC News reported.The authors of the study,[url=http://www.ocosound.com/]Cheap Christian Louboutin Shoes[/url], published in the journal Nature Climate Change, said that urban heat might be behind some parts of the planet warming faster than models have predicted, NBC News reported.The researchers found that areas most significantly impacted by this urban heat effect were Siberia and northern Canada, which can see temperatures rise 1.4°F to 1.8°F (0


The post has been approved 0 times
View user's profile
published in the journal Nature Climate Change
www.luntacunt.fora.pl Forum Index -> Genre
You can post new topics in this forum
You can reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum
All times are GMT + 2 Hours  
Page 1 of 1  

  
  
 Post new topic  Reply to topic  


fora.pl - załóż własne forum dyskusyjne za darmo
Powered by phpBB © 2001-2003 phpBB Group
Theme created by Vjacheslav Trushkin
Regulamin