40 41 42 43 44 Displaying 288-294 of 416 Articles

This sub-panel is where you can control most of the aspects of how the main display of the Visual Thesaurus looks.

Display. Allows you to toggle between a 2-D and 3-D display of the Visual Thesaurus

Scale. Allows you to increase or decrease the size of the Visual Thesaurus display. This is a useful when the display fills with densely related words and meanings. By increasing the scale, you can zoom into the cluster in greater detail.

Font Size. Allows you to increase or decrease the font size of words in the VT display.

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Click here to read more articles from VT Tip o' the Week.

With this column, we introduce the Visual Thesaurus' newest columnists, Simon Glickman and Julia Rubiner of Editorial Emergency! Read our recent interview with Simon here.

We brand ourselves. It's what human beings do. Whether we wish to conform to some social or cultural norm (the traditional blue button-down worn by generations of IBM programmers) or stand out as rugged individualists (the prescription bottle in the earlobe hole of a kid I saw on a Los Angeles sidewalk), we are forever distinguishing ourselves.

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Click here to read more articles from Candlepower.

I was sitting on my grandfather's lap. I understood the part about getting the page you're reading done. Getting it done was exactly what I wanted him to do. Seven-year-old boys are not big on patience. Or poetry either. I was about to suggest we do the Three Little Pigs all over again. But when I craned my head to look up at him, I saw a tear forming in the corner of his eye.  Continue reading...
Click here to read more articles from Backstory.

Blog Excerpts

Words in the Brain

Ever wonder where, exactly, words are stored in your brain? We thought so! Read the Sharp Brains blog's fascinating explanation, plus give your own gray matter a workout with a word-associations exercise. Check it all out here.
Click here to read more articles from Blog Excerpts.

My Juniors are beginning research papers this month, so last week, I broke the news to them, as I do every year: For their papers, they'll have to get up from their computers, go to an actual library building, and do some of their research with old-fashioned paper sources: newspapers, magazines, books. The horror in their eyes grows stronger every year, for each subsequent class I encounter lives more and more enmeshed in the online world. Yet, like my fellow teachers, I persevere with my insistence, for we know that research is a skill best learned in a library.  Continue reading...
Click here to read more articles from Teachers at Work.

Blog Du Jour

Sharpen Your Editing Pencil

These sites offer discussions, training, workshops, exercises and other resources for copy editors and journalists wanting to improve their craft.

Newsroom 101

No Train, No Gain

EditTeach

Testy Copy Editors

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Dog Eared

Books we love

Food Writing

Aspire to write about it, not just eat it? These nourishing books will help you satiate your food writing appetite:

Will Write for Food

Best Food Writing 2007

The Wilder Shores of Gastronomy

Remembrance of Things Paris

Click here to read more articles from Dog Eared.

40 41 42 43 44 Displaying 288-294 of 416 Articles