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Seventy-five years after the Peanuts comic’s initial release, Charles Schulz’s daughter offers insight on the linguistics behind the characters’ humor.
Students from across campus joined together to share their passion for their studies through short rants on anything and everything linguistics.
In her P. A. Christensen Lecture, Professor Belnap looked to the influential women in 19th-century France to explain how disruption can cause social reform.
Periodicals were a hot commodity in the Victorian era. Now, thanks to two BYU professors, we can read them once again.
Regardless of where you travel in the world, one thing will stay the same: food’s ability to bring people together.
Students all over campus join the Office of Digital Humanities to form a top-tier UX team where the user always comes first.
The College of Humanities just added a new language for undergrads. But you don’t speak it, you type it.
Elder Ulisses Soares of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles and Elder James W. McConkie III of the Europe Central Area Presidency met with French Senator Stéphane Demilly in Paris on November 12, 2024.
Tutors can be expensive and hard to find. However, new research shows that AI may provide a suitable alternative to one-on-one tutoring—at half the cost.
Do Chinese speakers and English speakers process emotions the same way? According to one BYU grad, the answer might be no.
Professor Christopher Flood turns to medieval French literature to explain worldwide conflicts.
Today, female authors can have successful literary careers, but not many women in the past could. Professor Anna-Lisa Halling has found a way to change that.