The person who answers the important questions: What if Aleister Crowley was Ian Fleming? What if James Bond was Bettie Page?
JK Spielman
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Glad to know in the ten years since I had a gym membership that gym salesmen are still sleazebags
"Cranial fracture" is more difficult to understand than "broken skull," especially for younger, under-educated, and non-native speakers. Other languages, even Romance languages, don't rely as heavily on actual Latin than English. 2/
My HS art teacher understood Bruce was different from the other advanced art kids. Bruce's only assignment ever was to draw kaiju. And this is what he did all day, every day, in every class: draw kaiju in a huge notebook. I don't know what happened to Bruce, but it better be related to Godzilla
This issue is being framed incorrectly. There are different types of literacy. For example health literacy, the ability to find and understand info about health. If you see an English speaking doctor, much of the terminology they'll use is Latin or derived from Latin. 1/
This is way more complicated than "they should pick up a dictionary" -- if someone has a 5th grade education, they may not be able to spell or even pronounce Leukemia, and they shouldn't be punished because English is a weird language. 4/4
This is why some health establishments will refer to Leukemia, Lymphoma, and Myeloma simply as "blood cancer." Health literacy means patients not only have to understand what they have, they need to also be able to communicate it to the people in their lives. 3/