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Dogs Are Smarter Than People: Writing Life, Marriage and Motivation
In our Random Thought, we talk about why people are mean. The link to our source is at the end of these notes.All you all,I (Carrie) am the WORST copyeditor for my own work. I'll admit it and that's because as a writer, I'm too close to it to pick out my errors, right?That's why it's good to have other people read your stories before you put them out there.So, we (Carrie and Shaun) are going to talk about some grammar mistakes: three super common ones. Ready?1. Every day or everydayWhat the what, right? There's a difference?Yes, yes, there is.Everyday when it's all one word is an adjective. That means it's describing something that happens all the time.Dreaming about manatees is an everyday occurrence for Carrie.Every day when it's two separate words is an adverbial phrase. Doesn't that sound fancy and terrifying? Adverbial phrase.It just means “each day.”Every day Carrie dreams about manatees.2. The magic apostropheI (Carrie) talk about apostrophes a lot and that's because a lot of us just haven't gotten the memo yet. That's okay! Don't be hard on yourself. Here's the memo again.Apostrophes have two main jobs.Job #1 is to show that something is possessing something else. No! Not in an exorcism kind of way, but an ownership kind of way.The manatee's flipper was so cute.The manatee owns that flipper. It possesses it.Job #2 is to show there's some letters missing because we have smooshed or contracted two words together.So, ‘It is' becomes it's. The apostrophe is replacing the I in ‘is.'Or ‘they are' becomes they're. The apostrophe is replacing the A in ‘are.'A lot of us write a word and maybe that word ends in an s. We go, “AH! It ends in a s. There should be an apostrophe in there, right? I shall put one in.” Only DO THAT IF IT IS A POSSESSIVE.Right: Apostrophes are cute little buggers and it's hard to resist them.Wrong: Apostrophe's are cute little buggers and its' hard to resist them.3. Lose it or Loose it?These words are evil little buttfaces. It's that double ‘o' versus single ‘o' that gets our brains all hooked up. Choose or chose has this issue too.Why are those o's so confusing? I don't know, but I do know that when I was little, I (Carrie) loved to put pupils inside them and make a smiley face.Here are the hints:LOOSE means not tight. It rhymes with moose! LOSE means you have lost something. You poor honey. That rhymes with booze. CHOOSE means you have to make a choice. It's the present. It's happening now. It rhymes with moose. CHOSE means you already made that choice. Are you regretting it? It rhymes with pose.Spoiler Alert: Don't be a butthead about other people's grammar mistakes.Here's the thing: We are all human. We all make mistakes. It is not the end of the world and other humans (the good ones) shouldn't be trolls about it. No offense to trolls. But we all have to be a little less harsh, a little less judgmental and a lot more understanding and forgiving.If someone writes its for it's or lay for lie, it doesn't mean they deserve to die or get your hairy eyeball of judgment. It just means they made a mistake. It's part of being human. And it's okay.DOG TIP FOR LIFEEnjoy life when you're here and don't waste your time being a meanie.BE A PART OF OUR MISSION!Hey! We're all about inspiring each other to be weird, to be ourselves and to be brave and we're starting to collect stories about each other's bravery. Those brave moments can be HUGE or small, but we want you to share them with us so we can share them with the world. You can be anonymous if you aren't brave enough to use your name. It's totally chill.Want to be part of the team? Send us a quick (or long) email and we'll read it here and on our YouTube channel.LET'S HANG OUT!HEY! DO YOU WANT TO SPEND MORE TIME TOGETHER?MAYBE TAKE A COURSE, CHILL ON SOCIAL MEDIA, BUY ART OR A BOOK, OR LISTEN TO OUR PODCAST? Just send us a message!HELP US AND DO AN AWESOME GOOD DEEDThanks to all of you who keep listening to our weirdness on the DOGS ARE SMARTER THAN PEOPLE podcast and our new LOVING THE STRANGE podcast. We're sorry we laugh so much… sort of.Please share it and subscribe if you can. Please rate and like us if you are feeling kind, because it matters somehow. There's a new episode every Tuesday!RANDOM THOUGHT LINK!The Psychology Today article on meanness.SHOUT OUT!The music we've clipped and shortened in this podcast is awesome and is made available through the Creative Commons License. Here's a link to that and the artist's website. Who is this artist and what is this song? It's “Summer Spliff” by Broke For Free.WE HAVE EXTRA CONTENT ALL ABOUT LIVING HAPPY OVER HERE! It's pretty awesome. We have a podcast, LOVING THE STRANGE, which we stream biweekly live on Carrie's Facebook and Twitter and YouTube on Fridays. Her Facebook and Twitter handles are all carriejonesbooks or carriejonesbook. But she also has extra cool content focused on writing tips here. Carrie is reading one of her raw poems every once in awhile on CARRIE DOES POEMS. And there you go! Whew! That's a lot! Subscribe
durée : 01:00:02 - Les Nuits de France Culture - par : Albane Penaranda - En 2001 s'arrêtait "Bouillon de culture" qui depuis 1991 avait pris le relais du légendaire "Apostrophes". La disparition de cette émission était l'occasion de s'interroger sur la place de la littérature à la télévision et la la radio. - réalisation : Virginie Mourthé - invités : Bernard Pivot Journaliste et critique littéraire français
Topics: 12 Days of Christmas, Christmas and Different Religions, Better Shape, Bible Sales, Christmas: Enjoy the People Around You, Evil Spirits, Breaking Animal News, Apostrophes, Shock Jock, Apple Ad, Human Washing Pods, Christmas: What Else Can He Do BONUS CONTENT: Apple Ads Follow-up Quotes: “Sherri agrees with herself.” “I want to know how to walk with God.” “I'm focusing on being quicker off the line.” “If you're a believer you can't traffic in unbelief.” Find out more about the show, click here!
Episode 2 - Dirt Simple Photo Gallery Dirt Simple Photo Gallery is the program that started me down the Plain Text Programs path. It predates my own thinking about Plain Text Programs by at least a decade. Ever since I wrote it I use it all the time. It is now my preferred web page generator for all kinds of web pages, not just galleries. Like most of my programs I wrote it because I needed it. Vivian and I were putting on music events like Blues Fest, Sunday In The Park, Jazz Thursday, New Jazz In Jonesboro, and Bebopalooza. I recorded all the shows. Sometimes video, always audio. And we loved taking pictures of the musicians singing and playing. After the shows we would dump the photo files to a hard drive, make all the original photos read only, and back them up to a CD or DVD. We really enjoyed scrolling through the photos, picking the ones we liked, cropping them and enhancing them, and resizing them for the internet. And then that's where it fell apart. We recorded the show. We took the pictures. We cropped the pictures and had them ready to go for our Delta Boogie website. And we didn't want to write the html. Some days we would have five or six bands playing. We usually had ten to twenty photos of each band that we picked out of hundreds of photos taken. Do the math. That's a lot of typing HTML code like a href =, img src, etc. A lot a captions to write. A lot of work to get done in a week. Because the next weekend we had another show. Another set of photos. Another bunch of html backlog. And the thing I found out. If we didn't get the pages posted right away we almost never had time to post them later. I mean we had kids to raise, cooking to do, cars to fix, school to attend, not to mention work. So, I loved writing programs more than I loved marking up html. And I could write one program and avoid marking up tons of html. And so I wrote the Dirt Simple Photo Gallery. Even back in the dark ages of the internet also known as the nineties there were photo gallery programs. And just like today they were cumbersome and running them was a lot like data entry. You know what I hate worse than writing html? Data entry. I had this idea. I would take all the photos we had ready for a gallery and I would upload them to a directory on our server. Then I would upload an index.php file and we'd have a photo gallery. And that's just how Dirt Simple Photo Gallery works. And if that's really all you need you're done. It wasn't quite all we needed. So I added a title.txt file and a notes.txt file so there could be a bit more than just the photos and captions on the web page. I was careful that I didn't have to write any html in the notes.txt file. The program even automatically turns copy and pasted links into hot links. Now, you can include html in the notes.txt file. You can even embed iframes if you want to include an audio or video player. But you don't have to. Also, iframe embeds are just a copy and paste exactly like links. Easy peasy. There's also the problem of the captions and the sort order of the photos. Captions I use the file names to carry the meta data required for captions and sort order. These are the characters I use in the file names. Alphanumeric, commas, apostrophes, dashes, and underscores. I don't use spaces but the underscores are converted to spaces in the captions. I use Thunar and I love the bulk rename option where I can search and replace a set of file names and change all the spaces into underscores. I have code that allows you to include special characters in your captions by using html character sets but it's confusing to think about. And I discovered the only special characters I really needed were dashes, commas, and apostrophes. All three of these characters are legal in file names on all major systems. Dashes are not problematic. Commas can cause problems if you are using comma delimited data but, I'm not, so no worries. Apostrophes can also be an issue because in php they are used as single quotes and can be used to delimit strings in the code. There is a way around this with php. Use double quotes to surround the entire string. If there is a place inside of that string where you would use single quotes, which is not uncommon in html, replace the single quotes with escaped double quotes, that is ". So that's what I did. So now I can use all the apostrophes I want in my file names and they fly right through my code, never accidentally truncating a string and throwing errors. Commas and apostrophes are important in captions. Captioning group shots without commas leads to misunderstanding people's names. And if your caption has a possessive in it like Joe's Garage leaving the apostrophe out is just wrong. Using double quotes in a file name will truncate strings in the php code and throw errors. Usually, anywhere you would want a double quote a single quote will do. There are other special characters, like dashes, that aren't problematic. Forward slashes and back slashes should not be used in file names ever. Some special characters may work on some systems and not on others. I've been using this program for almost 25 years and I really want commas and apostrophes and don't really care about other special characters in captions. You may have special needs for special characters I don't. That's why it's open source. If you need something the program isn't designed to provide test it. Fix it. Right now there are fewer than 100 lines of code in the program. I have confidence in you. Sorting Default sorting of images is alphabetical by file name. If you just name your files with good captions and don't add any numbers as a prefix that's what you'll get. Alphabetical by caption. This may be just what you need. If, however, you want some other sort order you can prefix your files with nnn- where n is any integer. 000-filename.ext displays the picture at the top of the page. If the photo is narrow enough, the text from notes.txt will wrap around it to the left. All the photos numbered 001- to 999- will display in a single column below the text. Unnumbered photos will also display below the text in alphabetical order. So if you want a photo at the top of the page add the prefix 000- to the file name. If alphabetical order is what you want for the rest of the photos you don't have to rename them. Permitted extensions are jpg, png, or gif. (It's hapeg stupid!) It's easy to add other permitted extensions in the code but, of course, they have to be rendered by a browser. I did not include the jpeg extension choosing to rename jpeg files to jpg. This made it slightly easier to code. There is a config.inc file where you can set your table width. The default is 700. I resize my photos to be 600 max width. I usually use jpg files with a quality level of 90. This reduces storage space and enables fast loading of images. The config.inc file also allows you to change background color, text color, link color, etc. There is also a CSS section in the config.inc file so you can change the font, the headline sizes, etc. Or add your own CSS. If you have trouble getting the text wraparound to look good on your page there is a way to disable it in the config.inc file. Install the page with ftp. Make a directory, where you want it on your website, and give it a good name. Upload index.php, title.txt, notes.txt, config.inc, and the image files into the directory. Go to your website and check it out. That's it. Page maintenance is the same. Fix captions by renaming files. Add and delete images. Update the title or the text in notes.txt and upload the changes. Change the font, colors, or CSS in config.inc and upload the changes. I have put up a demo site on infinityfree.com. And I am posting my show notes on my blog at https://home.gamerplus.org/ I will include links there to the demo site, the link to the comment thread for this podcast on Mastodon, and the link to the git repository on Codeberg. If you can't find Dirt Simple Photo Gallery use the search feature. To Network With Hairy Larry I have another plain text program at https://deltaboogie.net/ If you use or have written Plain Text Programs please let me know. I want to do a podcast about them. Thanks for listening. More Links Comment thread at Gamer+DBN on Mastodon Dirt Simple Photo Gallery Demo https://ptp.000.pe/Dirt_Simple_Photo_Gallery Repository on Codeberg Dirt Simple Photo Gallery https://codeberg.org/hairylarry/DirtSimplePhotoGallery
Retour sur le parcours de l'actrice la plus iconique de l'âge d'or du X français. Pourquoi a-t-elle autant marqué son époque ? Comment a-t-elle réussi sa transition professionnelle post-porno ?Mina et Jade s'intéressent au parcours de Brigitte Lahaie, en passant de ses quelques années marquantes dans le X à son passage vers le cinéma plus traditionnel puis à sa carrière d'animatrice radio toujours en cours teintée de discours toujours aussi juste sur le sexe mais parfois un peu décalé sur les sujets de société actuels.Pour plus de contenu exclusif et chaud comme la braise, viens suivre le N'importe cul sur InstagramPour en savoir plus :Extrait : Interview de Brigitte Lahaie sur C8Son passage dans l'émission Apostrophes en 1987Son passage en 2018 face à Caroline de Haas sur BFM Ses livres : Moi, la scandaleuse / Les Films de culte / Le bûcher des sexes / Lahaie par BrigitteSon émission Brigitte Lahaie chez Sud RadioCréditsCréé et animé par Mina et Jade. Produit par Mauvaises Ondes. Générique par Maxence Moogin. Musique de Stefano Mastronardi. Illustration d'Amandine Jonniaux. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Bernard Pivot, le créateur d'Apostrophes, vient de nous quitter le 6 mai dernier à l'âge de 89 ans. La célèbre émission littéraire, qu'il anima de 1975 à 1990 sur Antenne 2, était devenue le rendez-vous incontournable des auteurs et du monde de l'édition. L'ex-président de l'académie Goncourt avait, en plus des livres, deux passions : le vin et le football. On le retrouve avec Martine Cornil à propos de son Dictionnaire amoureux du vin en 2006. Photo : Micheline Pelletier/Sygma via Getty Images Merci pour votre écoute Par Ouïe-Dire c'est également en direct tous les jours de la semaine de 22h à 23h sur www.rtbf.be/lapremiere Retrouvez tous les épisodes de Par Ouïe-Dire sur notre plateforme Auvio.be : https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/272 Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.
Un « Bouillon de culture » que n'aurait pas renié Bernard Pivot mijotera dans vos oreilles cette semaine dans notre émission ! L'auteur compositeur décalé, paradoxal et décoiffant Sebka fera en effet escale dans notre studio pour nous présenter son nouveau single : « Sur la route »… Emule de Jacques Brel ou Georges Brassens mais aussi élève du grand parolier Claude Lemesle, l'artiste reviendra églement sur son dernier album, né durant le confinement et intitulé « Un peu des deux ». Un titre qui lui sied bien : défiant les clichés et les normes établies, il vous surprendra aussi en live acoustique affant d'effectuer une tournée dans le Grand sud ouest… Sur la route, encore et toujours ! Et c'est d'une autre émission mythique de M Pivot dont nous parlerons dans notre videoKITSCH de la semaine : le rendez-vous littéraite incontournable « Apostrophes ! Avec en guise de générique ce piano frénétique mené par Byron Janis, interprérant le concerto Vivace N°1 pour piano de Rachmaninoff… Comme chaqe semaine, nous vous « apostrophons » pour vous rappeler que vous pouvez nous écouter toute cette semaine dans Kitsch et Net !
Show notes for Episode 57 Here are the show notes for Episode 57, in which Lisa, Jacky and Dan talk about some recent Lang in the News, including: Apostrophes and why their disappearance has signalled the end of civilisation Johanna Gerwin's new paper on how MLE and ‘Jafaican' have been ‘enregistered' in the UK press Some articles about MLE A really good student answer to a question on MLE (thanks, Abi
durée : 00:03:59 - Comme personne - Alors que les obsèques de Bernard Pivot viennent d'avoir lieu, nous vous proposons un "portrait" des décors de la mythique émission "Apostrophes" à travers la voix du décorateur Michel Millecamps, qui garde un souvenir ému de sa longue collaboration (26 ans) avec le journaliste.
Le lundi 6 mai, Bernard Pivot est mort des suites d'un cancer à Neuilly-sur-Seine (Hauts-de-Seine). L'ancien animateur d'« Apostrophes » et de « Bouillon de culture » avait 89 ans.Bernard Pivot commence sa carrière au Figaro littéraire à 23 ans, malgré un entretien d'embauche catastrophique. Quelques années plus tard, il prend la direction du service avant de se tourner vers la télé en 1973 avec une première émission « Ouvrez les guillemets », qui ne sera pas un succès. Deux ans plus tard, en 1975, il a 40 ans quand Antenne 2 lui confie l'animation d'« Apostrophes », une émission dans laquelle il invite des écrivains, et séduit largement les téléspectateurs grâce à son amour pour les livres, mais aussi pour le foot et le vin. Code source fait le portrait de Bernard Pivot avec deux journalistes du service Culture du Parisien, Yves Jaeglé et Grégory Plouviez, chef adjoint de ce service. Écoutez Code source sur toutes les plates-formes audio : Apple Podcast (iPhone, iPad), Google Podcast (Android), Amazon Music, Podcast Addict ou Castbox, Deezer, Spotify.Crédits. Direction de la rédaction : Pierre Chausse - Rédacteur en chef : Jules Lavie - Reporter : Ambre Rosala - Production : Raphaël Pueyo, Clara Garnier-Amouroux et Thibault Lambert - Réalisation et mixage : Julien Montcouquiol - Musiques : François Clos, Audio Network - Archives : INA. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Vous aimez notre peau de caste ? Soutenez-nous ! https://www.lenouvelespritpublic.fr/abonnement Une émission de Philippe Meyer, enregistrée au studio l'Arrière-boutique en 2018. Bernard Pivot a soutenu notre peau de caste dès la première heure, il l'a écouté et commenté presque jusqu'à la fin. A l'annonce de sa mort, le phénomène qui s'est produit sur les réseaux sociaux mérite d'être appelé un chagrin national. Pour prendre notre part de ce chagrin, j'ai décidé de reporter d'une semaine notre conversation sur la capacité de la France à faire la guerre aujourd'hui. Je vous propose une heure de conversation avec Bernard Pivot, qui remonte à l'époque où en montant sur scène, il revêtait un nouvel avatar. Pour le générique de cette conversation, Bernard avait choisi « The man I love », de Gershwin, dans l'interprétation d'Alexandre Tharaud. Chaque semaine, Philippe Meyer anime une conversation d'analyse politique, argumentée et courtoise, sur des thèmes nationaux et internationaux liés à l'actualité. Pour en savoir plus : www.lenouvelespritpublic.fr
Nicolas Poincaré raconte l'un des événements qui a fait ou qui va faire l'actualité.
This week we're talking about Eaters Of The Dead, apostrophes, Clue, Henry James, and Godzilla Minus One. Show music by HeartBeatHero and OGRE. Support the show! Get up to 2 months free podcasting service with our Libsyn code OZONE
C dans l'air du 7 mai 2024 - Bernard Pivot : la fin des livres... l'ère des écrans ? Bernard Pivot est mort. À 89 ans, l'écrivain, animateur de télévision d'"Ouvrez les guillemets" puis d'"Apostrophes", s'est éteint hier à Neuilly-sur-Seine. L'ex-patron du magazine "Lire", auteur d'une vingtaine de livres, aura grandement contribué à la démocratisation de la littérature, lui qui obtint pourtant son bac de justesse avant de découvrir les plaisirs de la lecture lors de son embauche comme journaliste littéraire au Figaro. En janvier 1975, il lance "Apostrophes" sur Antenne 2, sorte de salon littéraire sur petit écran. Le succès est immédiat. Dans les années 1980, l'émission rassemble entre 2,5 millions et 6 millions de téléspectateurs. Les éditeurs s'arrachent l'accès à l'émission. En 1983, une enquête Ipsos établira qu'un tiers des achats de livres en France sont dus à "Apostrophes". Face à cette influence énorme, l'émission sera même un temps dans le viseur du gouvernement : "Nous avons des projets : enlever à une émission le monopole du choix des titres et des auteurs, accordé à l'arbitraire d'un seul homme qui exerce une véritable dictature sur le marché du livre", déclarera le conseiller culturel de François Mitterrand, Régis Debray. Cinquante ans après le lancement d'"Apostrophes", les livres n'ont plus la même popularité qu'avant. Certes, avec 4,4 milliards d'euros de chiffre d'affaires, le secteur du livre a encore bien résisté en 2023, mais le temps de lecture s'érode considérablement. Les jeunes Français lisent en moyenne 19 minutes par jour pour leurs loisirs, soit 4 minutes en moins qu'en 2022, selon le Centre national du livre. En parallèle, le temps passé sur les écrans explose : 3h11 par jour chez les 7-19 ans, soit dix fois que le temps de lecture. Depuis que la Commission écrans a rendu son rapport au gouvernement, le Premier ministre Gabriel Attal tire la sonnette d'alarme : "L'addiction aux écrans chez les jeunes et les enfants est une catastrophe sanitaire et éducative en puissance", a déclaré à l'Assemblée nationale celui qui réfléchit à bloquer les réseaux sociaux pour les moins de 13 ans à l'aide d'un "verrou numérique". À l'étranger, plusieurs pays ont déjà pris des mesures radicales. En Chine, le gouvernement a voté une loi pour bloquer les téléphones portables pour tous les mineurs de 22h à 6h du matin. Derrière cette peur des écrans, c'est notre rapport à la technologie qui est questionné. Selon un rapport rendu au gouvernement en mars dernier, l'intelligence artificielle (IA) devrait avoir un impact positif sur l'emploi, mais il faut se préparer à la disparition de certains métiers. Les métiers de secrétaires, de comptables et de télévendeurs, seraient les plus menacés. En France, certaines société ont déjà remplacé une partie de leurs salariés par l'intelligence artificielle. C'est le cas d'Onclusive, une société de veille média qui a présenté un plan social prévoyant la suppression de 217 postes, soit plus de la moitié de ses effectifs, pour 52 nouveaux créés. En janvier, les syndicats du groupe ont engagé un cabinet d'avocat spécialisé en intelligence artificielle pour prouver qu'une telle suppression d'emplois affecterait nécessairement la qualité de service. Quel héritage laissera Bernard Pivot à la littérature ? Face aux écrans, les livres sont-ils amenés à disparaître ? Comment lutter contre l'envahissement de la technologie ? LES EXPERTS : - Christophe BARBIER - Éditorialiste politique, conseiller de la rédaction de Franc-Tireur - Éric FOTTORINO - Écrivain, co-fondateur des revues Zadig et Le 1 Hebdo - Audrey GOUTARD - Grand reporter à France Télévisions, spécialiste des faits de société - Patrice DUHAMEL - Éditorialiste et ancien directeur général de France Télévisions, auteur de Le Chat et le renard - Fabrice LUCHINI - Acteur, en duplex
Au programme : Comment l'Europe va-t-elle utiliser le portefeuille des classes moyennes ? / Quelle est la place de l'Occident en Afrique ? / Les attaques des militants dans les musées et sur les oeuvres d'art. / Bernard Pivot, le présentateur d'émissions littéraires cultes comme "Apostrophes" et "Bouillon de culture", est mort. / L'inflation normative, ou quand la France crève de trop de lois !
durée : 00:02:36 - Les 80'' - par : Nicolas Demorand - Tous les vendredis soir à la maison, le dîner était expédié et la table rapidement débarrassée. Pour rien au monde mes parents n'auraient raté « Apostrophes », leur moment à tous les deux.
Sa première émission, Apostrophes présentée pour la première fois en 1975 devient rapidement un haut lieu de rencontres et de découvertes littéraires. Plus tard, il érigera également la dictée en sport national Mention légales : Vos données de connexion, dont votre adresse IP, sont traités par Radio Classique, responsable de traitement, sur la base de son intérêt légitime, par l'intermédiaire de son sous-traitant Ausha, à des fins de réalisation de statistiques agréées et de lutte contre la fraude. Ces données sont supprimées en temps réel pour la finalité statistique et sous cinq mois à compter de la collecte à des fins de lutte contre la fraude. Pour plus d'informations sur les traitements réalisés par Radio Classique et exercer vos droits, consultez notre Politique de confidentialité.Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
C'est en 1975 que Bernard Pivot s'invite dans le salon des Français avec son émission Apostrophes qui deviendra rapidement un haut lieu de rencontres et de découvertes littéraires. Il fera également de la dictée un sport nationalMention légales : Vos données de connexion, dont votre adresse IP, sont traités par Radio Classique, responsable de traitement, sur la base de son intérêt légitime, par l'intermédiaire de son sous-traitant Ausha, à des fins de réalisation de statistiques agréées et de lutte contre la fraude. Ces données sont supprimées en temps réel pour la finalité statistique et sous cinq mois à compter de la collecte à des fins de lutte contre la fraude. Pour plus d'informations sur les traitements réalisés par Radio Classique et exercer vos droits, consultez notre Politique de confidentialité.Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
durée : 00:20:17 - Journal de 18h - Il exerçait “le métier de lire”, selon son expression. Bernard Pivot s'est éteint, à 89 ans. Son nom restera indissociable de l'émission "Apostrophes", que le journaliste a animé pendant quinze ans sur Antenne 2.
Aujourd'hui dans "Punchline", Laurence Ferrari et ses invités rendent hommage à Bernard Pivot, décédé ce lundi 6 mai à l'âge de 89 ans. Homme de lettres et journaliste, il était l'animateur vedette de l'émission "Apostrophes".
durée : 00:20:17 - Journal de 18h - Il exerçait “le métier de lire”, selon son expression. Bernard Pivot s'est éteint, à 89 ans. Son nom restera indissociable de l'émission "Apostrophes", que le journaliste a animé pendant quinze ans sur Antenne 2.
L'animateur mythique d'"Apostrophes" est mort ce lundi 6 mai à 89 ans. Cette émission de télévision littéraire française a été diffusée en direct sur Antenne 2 entre le 10 janvier 1975 et le 22 juin 1990, chaque vendredi soir à 21h40.
Chaque été, Bernard Lehut accompagne des auteurs dans des lieux qui leur sont chers. Le 31 juillet 2011, le journaliste de RTL a enregistré cet échange avec Bernard Pivot.
Si Bernard Pivot a consacré sa vie à la lecture, il comptait également lui consacrer sa mort. Invité au micro de RTL en 2017 pour y présenter un livre de mémoires personnelles, Bernard Pivot envisageait avec délicatesse sa manière idéale de quitter ce monde. Le présentateur et écrivain, qui a fait lire des millions de Français grâce à son émission Apostrophes, est mort ce lundi 6 mai 2024 à Neuilly-sur-Seine à l'âge de 89 ans.
Décédé ce lundi 6 mai, Bernard Pivot a marqué des générations de téléspectateurs avec son émission "Apostrophes", mais aussi des lecteurs et des lectrices avec son poste de président à l'académie Goncourt.
Le journaliste et écrivain français Bernard Pivot est décédé ce lundi 6 mai à l'âge de 89 ans. Il est connu pour son rôle d'animateur de l'émission "Apostrophes" sur Antenne 2 dans les années 1970 et 1980, évoqué comme l'âge d'or de la télévision. Pour Ruth Elkrief, "C'était la Culture et la Littérature ouvertes à tous". L'inflation française en avril est au plus bas depuis septembre 2021 avec un chiffre de 2,2%. Cependant, les prix continuent d'augmenter, avec 1,8% d'augmentation sur les trois derniers mois. Selon Marc Touati, "L'inflation n'a pas dit son dernier mot". Il souligne que la baisse de l'inflation ne veut pas dire la baisse des prix. Des militaires russes ont pénétré dans la base aérienne 101 au Niger qui abrite des troupes américaines. Cette situation est la conséquence de la décision de la junte nigérienne d'expulser les forces américaines du pays. Grégory Philipps conclut que les Russes prennent position dès lors qu'un vide s'installe. En ce moment, Moscou développe des relations avec les pays africains dans tous les domaines, ajoute-t-il Du lundi au vendredi, à partir de 18h, David Pujadas apporte toute son expertise pour analyser l'actualité du jour avec pédagogie.
Décédé ce lundi 6 mai, Bernard Pivot a marqué des générations de téléspectateurs avec son émission "Apostrophes", mais aussi des lecteurs et des lectrices avec son poste de président à l'académie Goncourt.
The drink in question is actually from California.
A little chit-chat about scents we've been experiencing lately, including but not Limited Too™:New Fine'ry launches in TargetA Flowerbomb flanker that copied Prada's homeworkKilian's new diet Princess and toxic masculinity cola scentThe new Daisy...flanker? Find more info, episodes, and merch at Smellyalater.liveLeave us a voice message on the SYL Hotline at Speakpipe.com/smellyalater and we may respond on a future episode.Follow us on Instagram @smellyalater.mp3Leave a (nice) comment & (5-star) review wherever you stream, and if you feel so inclined, respond to our Spotify episode prompts please!
In this episode of The A to Z English Podcast, Xochitl and Jack discuss the differences between your and you're.Transcript:00:00:00JackWelcome to the A-Z English podcast. My name is Jack and I'm here with my co-host social. And today we are back in the grammar zone and social. Today we're looking at.00:00:13JackTwo homophones that are commonly confused, especially in writing, and that because they sound the same, so it doesn't matter when you're speaking, but when you're writing, they're actually spelled differently. It's your and your.00:00:30JackAnd so let's start with YOUR your what? What's the part of what part of speech is it? What does it mean? And can you give us an example?00:00:41XochitlYour is possessive. It indicates possession of something. So is that your breakfast? Is that your bottle of water? Like you're asking someone. Does that belong to you? You know, and so.00:01:00XochitlIt just indicates possession, essentially. That's why OER.00:01:02JackRight and.00:01:04JackFor the subject would be you, you, your it was like I my he, his, she, her. You. You're like that it's just it's just the possessive pronoun for the pronoun you you know.00:01:14XochitlYeah, you. Yes.00:01:19JackWhat about your YOU apostrophe re?00:01:24XochitlUMYOU apostrophe RE litter is a contraction of U&R which are two different 2 words. They're combined together with an apostrophe, so a lot of people get confused because in English we also use apostrophes to show possession like you would say Jack apostrophe S jacks.00:01:45XochitlThis Jacks laptop, so I think it gets confusing for students because YOU apostrophe RE. It seems like ohh there's an apostrophe there, it must indicate possession, but it doesn't. Apostrophes are often used in contractions which are when you combine two separate words and make them one word in the English language.00:02:07XochitlAnd this is 1 staple of native speakers is that we speak with a lot of contractions which can be confusing for students and non-native speakers as well.00:02:17JackYes. Yeah, that's you made some great points there.00:02:22JackI think the the best way to to kind of tell if if it's wrong is to break it into two words. So if you're saying like is this your computer and you spell it, YOU apostrophe RE separate those and say you are is this UR computer.00:02:41JackAnd then you think about that sentence makes no sense at all.00:02:44JackRight. Is this you are computer? No. It would you say? Is this your computer? YOUR because it's a possession. Not meaning you R. And so I think that I don't know. That's how I've always done it. You know, just if you separate the just take away the contraction.00:03:04JackAnd then if the sentence makes sense, you're OK. If the sentence is crazy like.00:03:11JackYou know you are. He is sitting in you are seat, you know. Then you know that something is wrong. No, he is sitting in your seat. Then it's then it's correct.00:03:24XochitlYeah, I think that's probably the best way to remember. As Jack said, just separate them out. And yeah, if this makes sense to you, if you have any other grammar questions that you would like to ask us, make sure to leave a comment down below at A-Z, englishpodcast.com, shoot Jack Ryan e-mail at AZ englishpodcast@gmail.com.00:03:45XochitlOr join the WeChat and WhatsApp groups to join our conversation and we'll see you guys next time. Bye.00:03:49XochitlOK.00:03:50JackBye bye.Podcast Website:https://atozenglishpodcast.com/grammar-zone-your-and-youre/Social Media:WeChat: atozenglishpodcastFacebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/671098974684413/Tik Tok:@atozenglish1Instagram:@atozenglish22Twitter:@atozenglish22A to Z Facebook Page:https://www.facebook.com/theatozenglishpodcastCheck out our You Tube Channel:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCds7JR-5dbarBfas4Ve4h8ADonate to the show: https://app.redcircle.com/shows/9472af5c-8580-45e1-b0dd-ff211db08a90/donationsRobin and Jack started a new You Tube channel called English Word Master. You can check it out here:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC2aXaXaMY4P2VhVaEre5w7ABecome a member of Podchaser and leave a positive review!https://www.podchaser.com/podcasts/the-a-to-z-english-podcast-4779670Join our Whatsapp group: https://forms.gle/zKCS8y1t9jwv2KTn7Intro/Outro Music: Daybird by Broke for Freehttps://freemusicarchive.org/music/Broke_For_Free/Directionless_EP/Broke_For_Free_-_Directionless_EP_-_03_Day_Bird/https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcodeSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/the-a-to-z-english-podcast/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
durée : 01:04:59 - Les Nuits de France Culture - par : Philippe Garbit - En 1984, François Maspero, célèbre pour son travail d'éditeur et de libraire, publiait son premier roman : Le sourire du chat. Il était pour l'occasion reçu pour la première fois dans l'émission "Apostrophes", aux côtés d'Annie Ernaux. Claude Duneton eut la belle idée de les suivre tous les deux. - invités : Francois Maspero
durée : 01:04:59 - Les Nuits de France Culture - par : Philippe Garbit - En 1984, Claude Duneton suivait la merveilleuse Annie Ernaux avant, pendant et après son premier passage dans "Apostrophes" pour son livre La Place. Angoisses, conseils des amis, choix de la tenue, rêves du jour d'avant, pensées à quelques minutes de la prise d'antenne… - invités : Annie Ernaux Écrivaine, prix Nobel de littérature en 2022
Écoutez la journaliste Lauren Bastide en conversation avec Marie Vingtras, autrice de « Blizzard », son premier roman publié aux Éditions de l'Olivier en 2021. Ensemble, elles reviennent sur son goût pour la littérature étrangère et sur l'origine de son pseudonyme. Elles échangent également à propos du long processus d'écriture de ce livre et le nouvel éclairage que lui apportent ses lecteurs.En marge des Rendez-vous littéraires rue Cambon, le podcast « les Rencontres » met en lumière l'acte de naissance d'une écrivaine dans une série imaginée par CHANEL et Charlotte Casiraghi, ambassadrice et porte-parole de la Maison.Écoutez maintenant sur chanel.comBlizzard, Marie Vingtras, © Éditions de l'Olivier, 2021, Points, 2023. © Le Prix des Libraires. © Apostrophes. Jean Giono, Le hussard sur le toit, © Gallimard, 1951. © Maison de la poésie. © La Grande Librairie.
Écoutez la journaliste Lauren Bastide en conversation avec Marie Vingtras, autrice de « Blizzard », son premier roman publié aux Éditions de l'Olivier en 2021. Ensemble, elles reviennent sur son goût pour la littérature étrangère et sur l'origine de son pseudonyme. Elles échangent également à propos du long processus d'écriture de ce livre et le nouvel éclairage que lui apportent ses lecteurs.En marge des Rendez-vous littéraires rue Cambon, le podcast « les Rencontres » met en lumière l'acte de naissance d'une écrivaine dans une série imaginée par CHANEL et Charlotte Casiraghi, ambassadrice et porte-parole de la Maison.Écoutez maintenant sur chanel.comBlizzard, Marie Vingtras, © Éditions de l'Olivier, 2021, Points, 2023. © Le Prix des Libraires. © Apostrophes. Jean Giono, Le hussard sur le toit, © Gallimard, 1951. © Maison de la poésie. © La Grande Librairie.
Denise Bombardier est décédée à l'âge de 82 ans. Elle s'était fait connaître également en France en étant la première à s'opposer publiquement à la pédophilie de l'écrivain Gabriel Matzneff dès 1990 sur le plateau d'"Apostrophes".
Dans "Ma vie avec Bernard Pivot" (Éditions Plein Jour), Noël Herpe revient sur le succès de l'émission littéraire "Apostrophes" présentée pendant 15 ans par Bernard Pivot. 724 émissions au total qui ont fait entrer la littérature chez les français, ponctuées de moments, d'échanges, de passes d'armes et de grands entretiens restés dans les annales.
This is our fifth episode covering Jenn Lyon’s The Memory of Souls in her A Chorus of Dragons Series. In this episode we read up to chapter 50 and talk about messed up family hobbies. Your hosts are Josh MacDougall (@FourofFiveWits), Christina Ladd (@OLaddieGirl), and Steph Kingston (@StephOKingston). Our art is by Chango Chamango (@ChangoChamango) …
Linguist Kate Burridge with the story of how Old English began on a small, damp island on the periphery of the world (R)
Linguist Kate Burridge with the story of how Old English began on a small, damp island on the periphery of the world (R)
The beer garden physics, need-to-know briefing on off-road specific high-tensile drag chain: if you use this in four-wheel drive recovery is it likely to fracture and recoil and kill someone. OLIGHT DISCOUNT! (These are awesome.) Get 12% off here >> Use code AEJC Save thousands on any new car (Australia-only) by contacting me via AutoExpert.com.au here >> Help support my independent reporting, securely, via Patreon here >> AutoExpert discount roadside assistance package (with no joining fees) here >> On Bullshit by Harry G Frankfurt >> F*#king Apostrophes textbook: https://amzn.to/3IpskpA Did you like this report? You can help support the channel, securely via PayPal here >>
Australia-Kiwi new car safety ratings agency ANCAP has just had a makeover of its website. Riveting stuff. Hilariously though, they've just become - unwittingly perhaps - the architects of the next great safety related new car buying disaster and we really need to talk about that... OLIGHT DISCOUNT! (These are awesome.) Get 12% off here >> Use code AEJC Save thousands on any new car (Australia-only) by contacting me via AutoExpert.com.au here >> Help support my independent reporting, securely, via Patreon here >> AutoExpert discount roadside assistance package (with no joining fees) here >> On Bullshit by Harry G Frankfurt >> F*#king Apostrophes textbook: https://amzn.to/3IpskpA Did you like this report? You can help support the channel, securely via PayPal here >>
In today's report we're going to turn this filthy, rusty engineering abomination into this fine collection of borderline erotic rust-free - some would say gorgeous - reclaimed parts. The best thing of all dude: nobody has to work up a sweat, it only takes about 15 minutes worth of actual work and it's so cheap it might as well be free... OLIGHT DISCOUNT! (These are awesome.) Get 12% off here >> Use code AEJC Save thousands on any new car (Australia-only) by contacting me via AutoExpert.com.au here >> Help support my independent reporting, securely, via Patreon here >> AutoExpert discount roadside assistance package (with no joining fees) here >> On Bullshit by Harry G Frankfurt >> F*#king Apostrophes textbook: https://amzn.to/3IpskpA Did you like this report? You can help support the channel, securely via PayPal here >>
Dear Electric Vehicle Council, the real world's lawyer just called apparently reality is filing for divorce. How else do you contextualize this thought-bubble about getting one million EVs on Australian roads by 2027? Here's why such a claim is unfeasible bullshit... OLIGHT DISCOUNT! (These are awesome.) Get 12% off here >> Use code AEJC Save thousands on any new car (Australia-only) by contacting me via AutoExpert.com.au here >> Help support my independent reporting, securely, via Patreon here >> AutoExpert discount roadside assistance package (with no joining fees) here >> On Bullshit by Harry G Frankfurt >> F*#king Apostrophes textbook: https://amzn.to/3IpskpA Did you like this report? You can help support the channel, securely via PayPal here >>
Multiple choice question, without warning: hotter, colder, slower, faster - which one of those is true about how the fuel burns if you tip high octane fuel into your car? OLIGHT DISCOUNT! (These are awesome.) Get 12% off here >> Use code AEJC Save thousands on any new car (Australia-only) by contacting me via AutoExpert.com.au here >> Help support my independent reporting, securely, via Patreon here >> AutoExpert discount roadside assistance package (with no joining fees) here >> On Bullshit by Harry G Frankfurt >> F*#king Apostrophes textbook: https://amzn.to/3IpskpA Did you like this report? You can help support the channel, securely via PayPal here >>
Toyota has decided to hand over just one smart key to each of its customers now on 14 different models but hey, it's not their fault. Thank God for the pandemic which has become the Swiss Army knife of corporate incompetence justifying excuses... OLIGHT DISCOUNT! (These are awesome.) Get 12% off here >> Use code AEJC Save thousands on any new car (Australia-only) by contacting me via AutoExpert.com.au here >> Help support my independent reporting, securely, via Patreon here >> AutoExpert discount roadside assistance package (with no joining fees) here >> On Bullshit by Harry G Frankfurt >> F*#king Apostrophes textbook: https://amzn.to/3IpskpA Did you like this report? You can help support the channel, securely via PayPal here >>
In this report, the secret beer garden physics of airbag and silly things that people do around them - it's a request from somebody just like you; may not be a real secret. OLIGHT DISCOUNT! (These are awesome.) Get 12% off here >> Use code AEJC Save thousands on any new car (Australia-only) by contacting me via AutoExpert.com.au here >> Help support my independent reporting, securely, via Patreon here >> AutoExpert discount roadside assistance package (with no joining fees) here >> On Bullshit by Harry G Frankfurt >> F*#king Apostrophes textbook: https://amzn.to/3IpskpA Did you like this report? You can help support the channel, securely via PayPal here >>
To clarify the title, no, we did not have Malcolm Gladwell on but it was still a Massive Wednesday with the lads — Brett re-joins the program to say hello, Malcolm Gladwell is anti-Work From Home, Dillon explains apostrophes, This Weekend in Fun, and so so much more. Support us on Patreon and receive weekly episodes for as low as $5 per month: www.patreon.com/circlingbackpodcast Subscribe to our NEW YouTube Channel: www.youtube.com/channel/UC6LMMZL-VGALwb-SpletPzg Shop Washed Merch: www.washedmedia.shop Today's Episode: (0:00) Fun & Easy Banter (17:00) Welcome Back, Brett Merriman (39:45) Malcolm Gladwell Anti-Work From Home (56:45) This Weekend in Fun Support This Episode's Sponsors Vizzy: www.vizzyhardseltzer.com/washed Rhoback: www.rhoback.com (BACKER20 for 20% off) Mizzen and Main: www.mizzenandmain.com (CIRCLING for $35 off) Liquid IV: www.liquidiv.com (CIRCLINGBACK for 25% off)
Ellen Jovin belongs that rare breed of human with a passion for grammar. You will too if you spend a few minutes with her, your grammar anxiety melting away in minutes. That's what happens when apostrophe-challenged Patrick meets Ellen at her Grammar Table in New York's Central Park. There, Ellen fields questions from passers-by about commas, semicolons, ellipses and weird-sounding neologisms. Ellen tells Patrick about her word-obsessed childhood, her love of hyphens, and why a Jehovah's Witness who approached the Grammar Table, "was not fully there for the apostrophes." Ellen Jovin's new book about her Grammar Table adventures in 47 states is Rebel with a Clause. Photo by Patrick Cox. Music by Greatfool, Frank Jonsson, Arthur Benson, Jules Gaia. Read a transcript of this episode here. Subscribe to Subtitle's newsletter here.
Ellen Jovin belongs that rare breed of human with a passion for grammar. You will too if you spend a few minutes with her, your grammar anxiety melting away in minutes. That's what happens when apostrophe-challenged Patrick meets Ellen at her Grammar Table in New York's Central Park. There, Ellen fields questions from passers-by about commas, semicolons, ellipses and weird-sounding neologisms. Ellen tells Patrick about her word-obsessed childhood, her love of hyphens, and why a Jehovah's Witness who approached the Grammar Table, "was not fully there for the apostrophes." Ellen Jovin's new book about her Grammar Table adventures in 47 states is Rebel with a Clause. Photo by Patrick Cox. Music by Greatfool, Frank Jonsson, Arthur Benson, Jules Gaia. Read a transcript of this episode here. Subscribe to Subtitle's newsletter here.
Speak English Now Podcast: Learn English | Speak English without grammar.
Hi, everybody! I am Georgiana, your English teacher and founder of SpeakEnglishPodcast.com. My mission is to help you speak English fluently. Today I am talking about punctuation. :) In the second part, you will improve your English fluency with a fun mini-story. It's like having a conversation with another person in English! Before we start, visit SpeakEnglishPodcast.com/podcast to get the transcript of this episode. Ok! Today I am talking about punctuation. By this word, I mean the different spelling marks used when writing. These are the main ones. Period or full stop . - is a punctuation mark that we use to show the end of a sentence. Commas , are the ideal punctuation mark to divide sentences or indicate when to pause. Apostrophes - we use them to identify something that belongs to someone, or to show a letter or multiple letters are missing from a word. Colons : are used to precede a list of items, a quotation, or an expansion or explanation. Semicolons ; indicate a pause, usually between two main sentences, longer than that indicated by a comma. Ellipsis … We use them to show that one or more words have been removed from a quote and create suspense by adding a pause before the end of the sentence. And we can also use it to show the end of a thought. Quotation marks " " Inform the reader that you have used written material from other sources or direct speech. Question marks ? Indicate that the speaker is asking a question. They're used at the end of the question (or interrogative) sentences. Exclamation marks ! Can change a sentence's meaning and tone. They still end a sentence, but they can add emotion, whether excitement, anger, or nervousness! Round brackets ( ) are used similarly to commas when we want to add an explanation, an afterthought, or a comment related to our primary line of thought but different from it. Square brackets or brackets [ ] We use them for special purposes, such as technical manuals. Hyphen - we use it to join words and separate syllables of a single word. Punctuations can be very confusing, especially if you don't know where to place them, and can change the entire meaning of what you want to say. Let's look at some examples of situations when we do not use punctuation marks properly: #1 Woman Without Man A teacher wrote the following sentence on the board and asked his class to punctuate it: Woman without her man is nothing. Half of the class punctuated the sentence in the following way: Woman: without her, man is nothing. The other half of the class responded with the following: Woman, without her man, is nothing. Fascinating how punctuation can change the meaning of a sentence entirely. Another example: #2 Your granny's life depends upon it! Here, commas matter. Let's eat granny! Or Let's eat, granny! See the difference? #3 Eat your dinner. You say to a child: Eat your dinner! You say to a cow: Eat! You're dinner! Here, apostrophes matter. #4 I'm sorry I love you. When you are in a terrible fight, you might say a horrible thing like this one: I'm sorry I love you. And when you want to make up again, you can say: I'm sorry; I love you. Semicolons matter! :) #5 I find inspiration in cooking my family and my dog. That sounds crazy! Right? We need some commas here! Let's hear it again: I find inspiration in cooking, my family, and my dog. That's much better! By the way, if you want to know how to speak English using the right techniques, visit SpeakEnglishPodcast.com and subscribe to my mailing list. I will send you my 5-day video course, so you can learn how to speak English fluently. And it's completely free.