Latest news
 | More pupils do not speak English One in eight pupils at primary schools in England speak English as a second language, official statistics show. (BBC News, September 29th, 2006)
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 | Can schools manage migrants? What happens when an area finds itself part of the revolution in migrant workers arriving from Eastern Europe? (BBC News, September 28th, 2006)
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 | Language book helps police forces A new phrase book is designed by a Herefordshire man to help police officers communicate with foreign nationals. (BBC News, September 27th, 2006)
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Universities in languages drive A campaign to encourage more people to study languages at university is being launched in England. (BBC News, September 26th, 2006)
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 | Do Britons lack je ne sais quoi? Foreign language skills are declining in the UK, prompting a drive to encourage more students. So why are we bad at learning lingo? (BBC News, September 26th, 2006)
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 | Vilnius launches 'language buses' An EU scheme to teach people foreign languages while they travel is starting in Lithuania's capital, Vilnius. (BBC News, September 20th, 2006)
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 | Metaphors can be dangerous: use sparingly, or they blow up in your face What is wrong with the following sentence? "Rabbit Angstrom trotted down the alleyway holding his jacket like an envelope." When I first read it, I was genuinely baffled. But envelopes don't wear jackets, I thought. Oh no, what the author means is that Rabbit is carrying his jacket in the same way as he'd carry an envelope. (The Telegraph, September 18th, 2006)
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 | A new rung in the languages ladder At last, some encouraging news about modern foreign language teaching. A new approach to it - being pioneered by the Oxford and Cambridge and Royal Society of Art (OCR) exam board - has had considerable success in encouraging children at primary school to start learning the subject. (The Independent, September 14th, 2006)
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 | Rethink on school language study Ministers are reportedly rethinking their decision to make language study in England optional from age 14. (BBC News, September 14th, 2006)
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 | Posh profanities will leave you feeling sworn out If you are of the view that swearing is both big and clever, I commend to you Big Ron Manager on Sky One, where the liberal use of the F word makes Goodfellas look like Bob The Builder. (The Guardian, September 11th, 2006)
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 | Hospital launches language pack The Royal Hospital in Belfast launches a multi-lingual admissions for patients who do not speak English. (BBC News, September 11th, 2006)
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 | Texts 'do not hinder literacy' Pupils who text-message may not be at risk of becoming poor readers and writers, researchers say. (BBC News, September 8th, 2006)
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 | Are African languages important? Swahili, Yoruba and Somali are now available to read on the internet based encyclopaedia, Wikipedia. Will this help preserve African languages? (BBC News, September 7th, 2006)
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 | Bilingual Welsh sign stumps Scots A building company apologises for putting up a bilingual sign in Aberdeenshire in English - and Welsh. (BBC News, September 6th, 2006)
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 | 'First' websites for sign users Two websites, thought to be the first of their type in Scotland, aim to improve web access for sign-language users. (BBC News, September 5th, 2006)
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