News

English recently became the US's official language. But on a tiny island, residents still speak the country's most English version of English, and many Americans don't understand it.
Elizabethan English and ASL collide on NJ Renaissance Faire day for deaf patrons. Story by Jane Havsy, Morristown Daily Record • 5m. L auren Guest stood high above the crowd waiting to enter the ...
Shakespeare at the Seder: Author writes Passover Haggadah as the Bard ‘would hast’ Martin Bodek renders the traditional holiday text into readable Elizabethan English, seamlessly adding ...
The fair's Elizabethan English is an additional challenge. The New Jersey Renaissance Faire can host 5,000 visitors per day. Brown isn't sure how many deaf patrons attended on May 31, ...
English recently became the US's official language. But on a tiny island, residents still speak the country's most English version of English, and many Americans don't understand it.
English recently became the US's official language. But on a tiny island, residents still speak the country's most English version of English, and many Americans don't understand it.