Here's today's Wordle answer, plus a look at spoiler-free hints and past solutions. These clues will help you solve The New York Times' popular puzzle game, Wordle, every day.
Here's today's Connections answer and hints for groups. These clues will help you solve New York Times' popular puzzle game, ...
Expandable storage may be disappearing from phones, but SD cards still power consoles, cameras, and more. This guide explains the specs, speeds, and formats that actually ...
There's a reason celebs are obsessed with the low-impact, core-focused method. Here's how it differs from yoga and barre, ...
The print edition of Merriam-Webster was once a touchstone of authority and stability. Then the internet brought about a ...
From Oxford's 'rage bait' to Macquarie Dictionary's 'AI slop', 2025 WOTYs show the influence of the virtual world on our ...
Don't get too upset, but 'rage bait' has been named by Oxford University Press as this year's Word of the Year, beating other online terms. The group behind the Oxford English Dictionary says the term ...
The word refers to low-quality content created by generative AI which often contains errors and is not requested by the user. A technology innovation expert says AI slop is "making its way upstream ...
If you're playing catch up with 2025's words of the year, we’ve already had Dictionary.com’s crowning of the viral (and baffling) Gen Alpha slang term “6-7”, as well as Collins Dictionary’s pick of ...
Cambridge Dictionary has revealed it’s word of the year for 2025: ‘parasocial’. ‘Parasocial’ is defined as a connection someone feels between themselves and a famous person they do not know. The rise ...
Cambridge Dictionary has named its word of the year for 2025, alighting on “parasocial,” used to describe a connection that people feel with someone they don’t know – or even with an artificial ...
Here's some news for the word nerds out there. Merriam-Webster, the country’s oldest dictionary publisher, is releasing a hefty, new Collegiate edition for the first time in 22 years. “So, the ...