Maybe you should learn it first? #English #ESLLove pic.twitter.com/3xwGojPMDE
— Grammarly (@Grammarly) October 1, 2017
Maybe you should learn it first? #English #ESLLove pic.twitter.com/3xwGojPMDE
— Grammarly (@Grammarly) October 1, 2017
The UK spends £68m a year on Pringles, and £6.8m on poetry. Our only solution is to start writing poems on crisps. #NationalPoetryDay pic.twitter.com/ktDu7KtATl
— Colin Dardis (@purelypoetry) September 28, 2017
Dave Pell weighs in on Twitter's controversial proposal to double the number of characters allowed in each post. I think he's right.
On a more serious note (well, more serious than the SAD! Tweet, but less serious than thermonuclear war), the reason Twitter thrived is because people were not intimidated by a big blank page that reminded them of the essays they dreaded during youth. Most people hate writing. Hence our societal move toward emojis and animated GIFs as a main mode of communication. 140 characters is so short that it doesn’t feel like writing. It certainly doesn’t feel like you need to be a writer to participate. 280 moves you away from “everyone can do it” and towards, “this is a great place for English majors.” And trust me, as an English major, that’s not a path that leads to an increased stock market valuation.
And winner of least likely reference to a cartoon character in a Latin textbook goes to.... pic.twitter.com/5qAFetjqSa
— ATTICIST (@ATTICIST) September 26, 2017
Albert Einstein visiting the Grand Canyon in 1931. pic.twitter.com/hDm2vPECqk
— History In Pictures (@HistoryInPics) September 24, 2017