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Word of the Day: charade

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Word of the Day: charade

The word charade has appeared in 46 articles on NYTimes.com in the past year, including on Feb. 16 in “3 Parrots, 1 Shared Wall, 2 Ruptured Lives” by David Segal. The article describes how noise complaints in a Manhattan co-op led to a $750,000 legal settlement and shattered a friendship between Charlotte Kullen and Meril Lesser.

To Ms. Lesser, the noise crisis was a sinister charade, an attempt by Ms. Kullen, in collusion with others in the building, to get her evicted so Ms. Kullen could buy her home, knock down their shared wall and make one large apartment.

Can you correctly use the word charade in a sentence?

Based on the definition and example provided, write a sentence using today’s Word of the Day and share it as a comment on this article. It is most important that your sentence makes sense and demonstrates that you understand the word’s definition, but we also encourage you to be creative and have fun.

If you want a better idea of how charade can be used in a sentence, read these usage examples on Vocabulary.com. You can also visit this guide to learn how to use IPA symbols to show how different words are pronounced.


Students ages 13 and older in the United States and the United Kingdom, and 16 and older elsewhere, can comment. All comments are moderated by the Learning Network staff.

The Word of the Day is provided by Vocabulary.com. Learn more and see usage examples across a range of subjects in the Vocabulary.com Dictionary. See every Word of the Day in this column.

Supporting Federal Workers in Transition with Free Learning and Career Resources 

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Supporting Federal Workers in Transition with Free Learning and Career Resources 

By Coursera

The recent workforce changes in the federal government have created uncertainty for thousands of employees. At Coursera, we recognize the challenges of career transitions, and we’re stepping up to provide critical learning resources to help affected federal workers navigate this change and unlock new opportunities.

Today, we are launching a dedicated initiative to support federal employees in transition with learning pathways designed to help them gain in-demand skills, prepare for new careers, and explore different job opportunities. The initiative includes: 

  • Free access to job-oriented courses – We are offering 5,000 free enrollments to a curated catalog of career-relevant courses designed to help workers quickly gain high-demand skills in areas like generative AI, data science, cybersecurity, project management, digital marketing, and more. Once the 5,000 limit is reached, learners can still enroll at a highly subsidized rate of 40%.
  • Industry-recognized credentials – Learners can earn certificates from leading industry partners,  including Google, Microsoft, Amazon, and IBM. These programs cover entry-level, intermediate, and advanced skills based on learner proficiency and career goals. Free access will be available until the end of the year, and learners will retain lifelong access to certificates earned during the period. 
  • Career transition resources – The Federal Workers in Transition page provides tailored guidance on navigating career changes, featuring content on high-income skills, resume writing, interview prep, and job application strategies. It includes career coaching articles on best practices to make a successful transition into new industries, guidance on professional development plans, and insights on navigating job interviews and salary negotiations.

Whether transitioning to the private sector, exploring entrepreneurship, or advancing within public service, Coursera is committed to supporting federal workers during this time of change and ensuring that high-quality learning resources are available to those who need them most.

For more information and to access these resources, visit our Federal Workers in Transition page.

Weekly Student News Quiz: Russia-Ukraine War, Quantum Computing, S.N.L.

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Weekly Student News Quiz: Russia-Ukraine War, Quantum Computing, S.N.L.

Above is an image related to one of the news stories we followed over the past two weeks. Do you know what it shows? At the bottom of this quiz, you’ll find the answer.

Have you been paying attention to current events recently? See how many of these 10 questions you can get right.

Should Parents Be Talking to Their Children About Online Pornography?

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Should Parents Be Talking to Their Children About Online Pornography?

Brian Willoughby knows he’s doing a good job when parents become uncomfortable. That’s because part of his job involves telling them that their teenagers are looking at pornography — hard-core, explicit, often violent. Sometimes, the conversation is with a church group.

Dr. Willoughby is a social scientist at Brigham Young University, where he studies the pornography habits of adolescents and the impact this has on relationships. When he goes into the community to explain what the modern world is like, he speaks plainly.

“I always have to be careful to couch things by saying, ‘I’m not saying porn is good — but I am saying it’s a reality,’” he said. “You can stick your head in the sand and pretend it doesn’t exist, and say this is bad and pray harder, or use addiction language, but you have to have a realistic understanding of what’s happening.”

In the past, many parents have tried to ignore the watching of pornography by their children, forbid its use or wish it away. But scholars who study the adolescent use of online pornography say that the behavior is so commonplace and impossible to prevent that a more pragmatic approach is required. When it comes to pornography, they want us to talk about it.

The aim: to teach adolescents that the explicit content they encounter is unrealistic, misleading about many sexual relations and, as a result, potentially harmful. The approach does not condone the content or encourage its use, Dr. Willoughby emphasized, but acknowledges its ubiquity and unrealistic, hard-core nature. Long gone are the days of nude magazines that left much to the imagination.

“That was nudity, sexualized,” Dr. Willoughby said of the pornography of yesteryear. “A lot of parents still think that porn is Playboy.”

Students 13 and older in the United States and Britain, and 16 and older elsewhere, are invited to comment. All comments are moderated by the Learning Network staff, but please keep in mind that once your comment is accepted, it will be made public and may appear in print.

LMS vs. No LMS: What’s the Real Difference for Growing Companies?

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LMS vs. No LMS: What’s the Real Difference for Growing Companies?

Your business is experiencing growth – congratulations! Are you worried that your staff don’t have the skills to take it to the next level? If you’re looking for cost-effective training solutions, you’ve come to the right place. Let us explain the pros and cons of a learning management system (LMS) for your business.

Let’s be honest upfront and admit that we want you to set up an online training system with us, even if you run a tiny workshop at the less glamorous end of your sector. Why? Because Alison’s mission and raison d’etre is to empower individuals in every way possible. We want to equip your team to fulfil their potential. Since launching our LMS last year, we’ve helped over 5,000 businesses from 65 sectors in 100 countries – and we’re only getting started.

Furthermore, our LMS is different from other online learning platforms in one significant aspect – it’s free!

Head of B2B Olivia Cosgrove and her team have worked hard to deliver an employee training platform that makes a genuine difference to thousands of organisations across various industries.“My team often tell me that our clients have been able to implement training programs they thought they could not afford, support service-users of NGOs who serve the otherwise unserved, and bolster employee wellbeing where resources are otherwise inaccessible.

“This not only gives me a sense of pride and accomplishment in what we have built and how we are making a difference, but it also makes me determined to do more to help those who were left behind.

Why Use an LMS for Employee Training?

Feedback from businesses that have used our LMS is overwhelmingly positive. With a library of over 5,500 free courses, our offering likely covers the exact skills your workforce needs to drive your business forward.

Perhaps a customer support agent could sound more professional? We can help them to help your business make a better first impression.

Do you have a salesperson who’s excellent at finding leads but seems to struggle to close a deal? We can give them the skills they need.

Perhaps you have some new hires who need to improve their English? You’ve come to the right place.

Without a learning management system, it’s difficult to help these staff overcome these challenges. Our Free LMS can help you select precisely the training they need, and before you know it, your support team will be charming customers, the sales team will be boosting your bottom line and your new hires will be communicating easily and feeling more included and confident in their workplace.

Perhaps you’d like to boost your own business or management skills? We can help you develop your leadership skills, discover how AI can increase your productivity, improve your cash flow or master the basics of HR or health and safety. Create your Free LMS and start learning – it’s that easy!

Online LMS vs. Traditional Training

Let’s face it: traditional training methods are expensive and completely unfeasible for small businesses. You have to pay for your employees to attend a training centre, or bring a trainer in-house. The training can take days, eating into your productivity.

Olivia Cosgrove says: “Free LMS is for organisations of any size, industry, or geographic location. Whether you’re training 5 people or 5,000, our LMS is FREE and here to support you in building a culture of learning.”

With online learning, your employees can log on anywhere. They can download the Alison app and study at a time that suits you and them, without having to leave work. Apart from the convenience, 90% of students prefer learning online to traditional learning methods, according to Research.com.

You can see why we’re the best LMS for small businesses! (We’re also excellent for large organisations, of course.)

How Does Alison’s Free LMS Work?

You know now what Alison’s Free LMS can do for your business but you don’t have time to look into it? Stop right there. All you need to do is head over to our Fee LMS website, and you’ll see how easy it is to sign up and start building a free training portal for your small business. In less than 5 minutes, you’ll be ready to select courses and assign them to your employees.

You can pick one of the learning paths we’ve created under any of the following categories:

If you don’t see the topic you’re looking for, one click will take you to our entire selection of courses in that category.

Regular reports keep you updated on everyone’s learning progress, and you can choose to celebrate their achievements by purchasing their certificates – or not!

What Makes Alison’s Free LMS Stand Out From the Crowd?

Our game-changing commitment to creating a level playing field for everyone, everywhere, goes from the top of the company to the bottom. As Olivia Cosgrove explains: “I came to Alison because I believe that small, medium, and budget-lean organisations are being unfairly priced out of the market by the learning industry’s bloated commercial structure.

“Alison has already removed cost as a barrier to education for the individual, so the natural next step was to extend that mission to organisations. Skills directly impact productivity and profitability, and developing them is not a ‘nice to have’. As an SME ourselves, Alison is committed to helping other organisations grow.

To the B2B team at Alison, it’s simple:

  • Every organisation should be able to offer professional development to improve their employee engagement, retain their important tenured staff by investing in their upskilling, and attract talent that values that same investment.
  • Every organisation should be able to develop the skills it needs to compete today and futureproof itself for the skills required in years to come.
  • No organisation should be penalised for being an SME early in its growth journey or having limited resources for CapEx investments.

Now you know that an affordable LMS is literally at your fingertips, it’s over to you. Sign up today and help your staff and your business to greater success!

Frequently Asked Questions

Q. Is Alison’s LMS really free? What’s the catch?

Yes, Alison’s LMS is completely free to use. Our mission is to make education and skills development accessible to everyone, including organisations of all sizes. There are no hidden fees or charges for setting up your LMS, assigning courses, or tracking progress. We offer optional paid certificates for learners who wish to showcase their achievements, but these are entirely optional and do not affect access to the LMS itself.

Q. What if I need help setting up my LMS or have questions along the way?

Alison provides comprehensive support resources to help you get started and make the most of your LMS. You can find tutorials, FAQs, and contact information for our support team on our website. We’re here to assist you with any questions or challenges you may encounter.

Q. Our business has very specific training needs. Can Alison’s LMS be customised to fit our requirements?

The extensive library of over 5,500 courses means that it’s highly likely we have training content that meets your needs. You can easily create custom learning paths by selecting relevant courses and assigning them to your employees. If you have a very unique need, you can contact us to discuss potential options.

The Sims

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The Sims

The Sims turns 25 this year, and more than 500 million people have played one of the games in this franchise. Are you one of them?

If so, what do you like about The Sims? What, if anything, did it teach you or help you with? What memorable moments have you ever had playing it?

Tell us in the comments, and then read the related article to learn more.


Students 13 and older in the United States and Britain, and 16 and older elsewhere, are invited to comment. All comments are moderated by the Learning Network staff, but please keep in mind that once your comment is accepted, it will be made public and may appear in print.

Find more Picture Prompts here.

Word of the Day: herculean

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Word of the Day: herculean

The word herculean has appeared in 92 articles on NYTimes.com in the past year, including on Jan. 14 in “Can the Only Grocery Store in a Rural Michigan Town Stay Independent?” The article is about how the owners of Honor Family Market are ready to retire, but a buyer would face the tight margins of a small business and competition against the giant chains and discount stores. Keith Schneider writes:

They hope to keep the grocer independent, a herculean task during a time of industry consolidation that has pushed up grocery prices.

Can you correctly use the word herculean in a sentence?

Based on the definition and example provided, write a sentence using today’s Word of the Day and share it as a comment on this article. It is most important that your sentence makes sense and demonstrates that you understand the word’s definition, but we also encourage you to be creative and have fun.

If you want a better idea of how herculean can be used in a sentence, read these usage examples on Vocabulary.com. You can also visit this guide to learn how to use IPA symbols to show how different words are pronounced.

If you enjoy this daily challenge, try our vocabulary quizzes.


Students ages 13 and older in the United States and the United Kingdom, and 16 and older elsewhere, can comment. All comments are moderated by the Learning Network staff.

The Word of the Day is provided by Vocabulary.com. Learn more and see usage examples across a range of subjects in the Vocabulary.com Dictionary. See every Word of the Day in this column.

Internal vs External Learning Systems, Easy to Explain?

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Internal vs External Learning Systems, Easy to Explain?

There is no simple answer regarding the differences between internal and external learning systems. The landscape is complex with various types of learning systems, including Learning Management Systems (LMS), Learning Platforms, Talent Development Platforms, Learning Experience Platforms (LXP), and Mentoring Platforms, each serving different audiences such as employees, customers, clients, partners, and distributors.

Internal Learning Systems

Internal systems focus on onboarding, skilling, and upskilling employees. Key features include:

  • Skill Development: Tools for reskilling employees, offering coaching, mentorship, and opportunities to practice new skills.
  • Content Specificity: Content delivery aligned with job roles and personal development goals.
  • Skill Ratings and Job Roles: Mechanisms to rate skills and align job roles with opportunities, requiring managerial oversight for approvals.

External Learning Systems

In contrast, external systems emphasize customer training and engagement, characterized by:

  • Multi-tenant Capabilities: Ability to serve various external audiences.
  • E-commerce Features: Systems that support customer transactions, particularly in training environments.
  • Data-Driven Metrics: Insights centered around customer training, helping organizations track performance and completion rates.

Key Differences

  1. Focus Areas: Internal systems prioritize employee development, while external systems cater to clients and customers.
  2. Metrics Usage: Internal metrics revolve around learning paths for employees, whereas external metrics focus on customer engagement and training effectiveness.
  3. Functionality: Internal systems might lack certain features for external audiences, like extensive e-commerce capabilities.
  • Goal Management
  • Workflows—Customer training vendors who have plunged into internal may have it, but it will not be as strong as an internal system —that said, plenty of internal systems lack it.
  • Workflows that are expanding far more than current – this is a growing trend with internal – Learn Amp has it. Impressive.
  • Job Roles are intertwined with skills and content and are becoming tied to external sources, too. However, this is not universal. The job roles are the key here. Combos really have it—again, it is not universal.
  • Job Role driven
  • Strong level with skill ratings – If a vendor plays internally at a greater level, they will usually have this. Skill ratings are becoming universal, except when the vendor is 98 to 100% only customer training – external. Combos are all over the map with this. For example, Docebo has it and plays stronger externally – audience-wise – but feature sets are a perfect example of trying to do both segments. They have skill ratings, but compared to a Cornerstone, it isn’t at that tier. Neither do several other vendors who are at a Cornerstone level.
  • Skills Management—From skill mapping to skills capabilities, internal will always be stronger here. Combos can be solid, but they haven’t, in my opinion, achieved a level of heavy internal. And a combo that is more external but plays internal, who has it, has yet to penetrate at a solid level.
  • Metrics are all around L&D – That said, being great at it versus yuck is common. It seems to be either you are good at doing it or poor. Jekyll and Hyde here. I always note that if you can’t look at your data and get a firm idea of your learning story, which you should, it is a colossal failure. Anyway, this is a key piece I always look at, and I can tell in less than two minutes whether they are heavy internal and good at it or solid or strong internal and horrible at it. External – their metrics are not even close to this, even in the Combo space. If they are only External, their metrics are all around external.
  • Roles tied to Opportunities—clear. The funny thing is that a vendor who is one of the few attending LXPs out there, as in that is the core, has the roles, skills, and opportunities available. Combos—yeah, it can be brutal out there.
  • Learn Amp—They are all about internal. You can do external with them, sure. But their focus and core are internal. That should be a huge hint when you call yourself an employee development platform.
  • Juno Journey – If a vendor says they are an L&D platform – huge hint – they are core internal.
  • Cornerstone LMS, even Cornerstone Learn – Internal heavy. Again, you can do external; you get the point if a vendor offers multi-tenant and an extended enterprise option (the term should be customer training). You can do internal only with multi-tenants like you have dozens of LOBs or want to streamline all your systems under them. They now include a mentoring-heavy piece in their LMS – at no charge. Mentoring is internal – down the road, I see it externally, too – as a combo.
  • BizLMS plus BizSkills – Internal only. I would do it with both platforms. L&D is only here.
  • Docebo—As my rankings show, they are really good and skew internal, but they do have enough functionality for external. I would put them in play for internal. They are a legitimate threat.
  • Access Learning – Focus is on compliance – total internal
  • Acorn PLMS – Internal. Internal – hey, did I mention internal?
  • Kallidus – Heavy internal. It plays externally, too – but this screams internal.
  • SuccessFactors LMS—They are as internal as you can get, despite being underwhelming as a system.
  • Workday Learning—See above. They can meet with SuccessFactors and hang out together. Who brought the hot dogs?
  • Zensai Learn365 – Internal heavy. You may have heard of LMS365 – that is, well, sort of them, before acquisition.
  • Spark Learn—It’s all about front-line workers, including blue-collar workers. This is internal. Feature-wise, it’s not strong in many of those areas. Okay, they miss a few. But yeah, internal.
  • Schoox – They started to enter the customer training segment, which is odd because they are heavily tailored around internal. I wouldn’t buy them for customer training.
  • KREDO – Internal heavy. They dispute this, and you can go external, but I believe it is more internal.
  • Thirst—Internal focus. Is it a true LXP? I’m not seeing it. It has a lot of functionality, but from a serious LXP segment standpoint, nope.
  • Multi-tenant, with many options beyond what an internal can do. The challenge here is those combo systems—they can be a lot like an external, depending on the growth of one segment versus another.
  • E-Commerce—Customer Training will have it—whether you have to pay to use the service is a different question. In Combo land, the majority offer it—I mean Combo, which means both sides. The top ones on the Combo side do a far better job here.
  • Assigned Learning isn’t the focus here. If they offer it, well, it means they offer it. Nowadays, heavy CT offers it—not by choice; those darn Combos are causing it.
  • Metrics—The King Kong—All the metrics are around customer training. You can look at a customer training platform, take a look at those metrics, and it will tell you its learning story. If the vendor plays heavily in association land, then their metrics will have a solid set for external but a solid set for internal. Again, Combo here. This is one way to say, “Okay, this system is heavy for customer training.”
  • Eurekos is 100% focused external. Plus, they bill monthly, so you pay only for those in it—rare but plays well into the customer training side.
  • Thought Industries – 98% external. Super strong here.
  • Absorb LMS—Combo, but I like them more for external use. They can also go internal. The system goes about 50-50 here. I see them as a vendor who can do some serious damage in the external space, so I slide them here. If you want them for internal use, they have all the items noted above.
  • Intellum – Always played heavily in external.
  • Learning Cart – External full throttle.
  • NetExam – External.
  • Docebo – Combo land. They play more on the external side, but as noted earlier, they can do very well on the internal side. Can the top Combos do this? Can the rest? Well, a middle pack, the rest? Forget about
  • LearnUpon – Combo – They do a good job with external, hence the slide here.
  • Skill Jar—They do have some metrics for externals, but the idea that they are all about external is erroneous, in my opinion. See the case study above for more information on the other part.
  • Plenty of others – but yeah, I’m sure you found them.

What’s Your Exercise Routine?

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What’s Your Exercise Routine?

What do you do to stay fit? Do you jog? Hit the gym? Start the day with stretching, push-ups or yoga? Go for walks or runs? Play sports?

What benefits do you get from these activities? Would you like to improve or change up your approach to fitness?

In “Are Americans Doing Fitness Wrong?,” Talya Minsberg writes that Americans are generally not getting enough exercise:

For many people in the United States, staying in shape means getting in your car and driving to the gym. Movement is something on a to-do list, siloed off from the rest of daily life.

That mentality is quintessentially American, according to Natalia Mehlman Petrzela, a professor of history at the New School and the author of “Fit Nation.”

“There’s this crazy paradox where America is, in many ways, the center of the commercial fitness industry, but it’s also a place where by pretty much every measure people are extraordinarily unfit,” she said.

Only about a quarter of American adults get the recommended amount of physical activity, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and inactivity contributes to 1 in 10 premature deaths.

Part of the problem, Dr. Mehlman Petrzela said, is the “pay-to-play experience” embedded in American fitness culture. There are endless gyms, classes and products that promise to make you fitter, as long as you hand over your credit card.

But there are other ways of approaching exercise. In many nations, movement is baked into everyday life — as a way to commute from one place to another, to build community or to connect with nature.

Ms. Minsberg shares some lessons Americans might learn from four cultures — Finland, Japan, the United Kingdom and Brazil — according to fitness experts. Here are excerpts:

Finland: Walk wherever you can, even when it’s freezing.

When you live in a nation like Finland, where daylight only lasts for some six hours in the dead of winter, you learn to embrace extremes.

So it’s no wonder that the Finnish have a “no bad weather, only bad clothes” type of mentality, said Mika Venojärvi, a professor of exercise medicine at the University of Eastern Finland. It’s always popular to explore the outdoors, Mr. Venojärvi said, even in frigid temperatures.

Japan: Embrace short bursts of exercise.

Every day, a short exercise routine known as radio-taiso is broadcast across Japan on YouTube and Japan’s national radio station. In parks, office buildings and schoolyards, groups of people join together throughout the day in a three-minute, 13-move calisthenic routine — no equipment required. Movements include arm circles, forward bends, backward bends and star jumps, which are similar to jumping jacks.

The United Kingdom: A workout can be a community event.

Twenty years ago, a runner named Paul Sinton-Hewitt invited a small group of friends to what he called the Bushy Park Time Trial: a five-kilometer run with the promise of coffee afterward. They had a great time, and Mr. Sinton-Hewitt decided to do it again the next weekend, and the weekend after that.

That event gradually grew into parkrun, an organization that now hosts roughly 2,500 free running events every weekend in public spaces across 23 countries, including Ireland, Malaysia and Namibia.

Brazil: Make fitness feel like a party.

Brazil’s beaches are routinely packed with people jumping, sprinting, squatting and skating. Beach volleyball and soccer games dot the sand, sandwiched between walkers on boardwalks and surfers in the Atlantic.

There’s so much activity that “if you go to Rio de Janeiro and Copacabana at 5:30 p.m., it will be hard to walk in a straight line,” said Luiz Guilherme Grossi Porto, a professor of physical education and public health at University of Brasília.

Students, read the entire article and look at all of the photos and videos. Then, tell us:

  • Is physical activity a part of your daily or weekly routine? If so, what do you do? Play sports? Walk your dog? Lift weights? Dance? Ride your bike? Do you enjoy the exercise that you do? Or do you do it grudgingly?

  • How important is regular exercise to you? What benefits do you get from it?

  • Ms. Minsberg begins her article by writing: “For many people in the United States, staying in shape means getting in your car and driving to the gym. Movement is something on a to-do list, siloed off from the rest of daily life.” Does that ring true for you?

  • Ms. Minsberg writes that in Brazil, fitness feel like a party, and in Japan, people embrace short bursts of exercise. Which lessons from other cultures would you like to incorporate into your approach to fitness — and why?

  • Only about a quarter of American adults get the recommended amount of physical activity. Do you think Americans would benefit from a public, group-fitness activity like the radio-taiso routines that the Japanese practice?

  • What tips do you have for other teenagers — or adults — who want to be more active but don’t know how to make exercise a fun, meaningful or essential part of their life?


Students 13 and older in the United States and Britain, and 16 and older elsewhere, are invited to comment. All comments are moderated by the Learning Network staff, but please keep in mind that once your comment is accepted, it will be made public and may appear in print.

Find more Student Opinion questions here. Teachers, check out this guide to learn how you can incorporate these prompts into your classroom.

Word of the Day: enunciation

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Word of the Day: enunciation

The word enunciation has appeared in five articles on NYTimes.com in the past year, including on Nov. 14 in “‘King Lear,’ Faster and Less Furious.” The review, written by Maya Phillips, includes a critique of Kenneth Branagh’s acting:

Branagh himself, usually armed with such a well-attuned ear, here seems to have lost his handle on the text’s lyricism and the naturalistic iambic gait of the speeches. Instead he recites his lines in a rushed singsong with some unnecessary frills: a few hammily rolled r’s, pretentiously clipped consonants and baffling acts of enunciation.

Can you correctly use the word enunciation in a sentence?

Based on the definition and example provided, write a sentence using today’s Word of the Day and share it as a comment on this article. It is most important that your sentence makes sense and demonstrates that you understand the word’s definition, but we also encourage you to be creative and have fun.

If you want a better idea of how enunciation can be used in a sentence, read these usage examples on Vocabulary.com. You can also visit this guide to learn how to use IPA symbols to show how different words are pronounced.

If you enjoy this daily challenge, try our vocabulary quizzes.


Students ages 13 and older in the United States and the United Kingdom, and 16 and older elsewhere, can comment. All comments are moderated by the Learning Network staff.

The Word of the Day is provided by Vocabulary.com. Learn more and see usage examples across a range of subjects in the Vocabulary.com Dictionary. See every Word of the Day in this column.