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2026-06-28 All dayhttps://standardsmichigan.com/by-all-your-saints-still-striving/
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2026-07-12 All dayA Sunday kind of love with Virginia Belles 🧡 pic.twitter.com/c85UgJVjRN
— UVA (@UVA) April 5, 2026
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2026-07-17 All dayhttps://standardsmichigan.com/%e0%ae%ae%e0%af%8a%e0%ae%b4%e0%ae%bf-2/
https://standardsmichigan.com/history-of-the-english-speaking-peoples/
"Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic" | Gordon Matthew Thomas Sumner (Sting) 1976
Chorhaus St.Michael | Dormagen Germanyhttps://t.co/NJkX3bnZ74https://t.co/OqFFb1pcAzhttps://t.co/2QBAfnBB6f
print("Lunch Hour 1600 UTC")\n weekday(2)https://t.co/sDljRHyvXr pic.twitter.com/KGI5iTBXo6— Standards Michigan (@StandardsMich) October 15, 2025
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2026-07-18 All dayScotland is the origin of The Industrial Revolution. A tendril of Old Scotland remains alive in the hills of Arkansas

A tendril of Old Scotland remains alive in the hills of Arkansas
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2026-07-20 All day"Tradition and the Individual Talent" T.S.Eliot 1818
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American conservatives and liberals often disagree because they attach different meanings, priorities, and emotional associations to the same words. Political language evolves as society changes, and each movement seeks terminology that reflects its values and persuades others. Conservatives may emphasize continuity, tradition, and established definitions, while liberals may advocate revised language that reflects changing social norms or emerging perspectives and technologies.
As new terms gain acceptance and older meanings shift, debates arise over whether language is clarifying reality or reshaping it. These disagreements extend beyond vocabulary, reflecting deeper differences about history, identity, law, culture, and the proper role of institutions -- such as standards setting organizations -- in defining and communicating public values.
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Popular music is one of the chief ways that American vernacular English is created, refined, and shared. A successful song can introduce a phrase, metaphor, or rhythm of speech that quickly spreads beyond its original audience into everyday conversation. Because songs are repeated on radio, streaming services, at sporting events, and in schools, their lyrics become familiar across generations and regions. Memorable lines are quoted in casual conversation, advertising, journalism, and even political speeches, giving them cultural authority.
Songwriters pick up on the language of ordinary people while expressing it with economy, wit, and emotional force. As a result, lyrics preserve regional expressions, technical domains, idioms, thus reshaping older ones into forms that feel fresh and memorable. Over time, the most enduring lyrics become part of the nation's shared vocabulary, enriching American vernacular English by providing common expressions, cultural references, and memorable turns of phrase that unite speakers from diverse backgrounds.