Australia and England are both multicultural countries where hundreds of languages are spoken. However, in both, levels of language learning at school are worryingly low. Australia has seen a major ...
The story of Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander languages is one of loss, resilience and now renewal.
The Conversation: Young people in England and Australia are supposedly poor at learning languages – our research shows this isn’t true
Young people in England and Australia are supposedly poor at learning languages – our research shows this isn’t true
The Conversation: We are on the brink of losing Indigenous languages in Australia – could schools save them?
Of the world’s 7,000 languages, it is estimated 50% to 90% will no longer be spoken in the next 50 to 100 years. The majority under threat are languages spoken by Indigenous peoples around the world: ...
We are on the brink of losing Indigenous languages in Australia – could schools save them?
The meaning of MANY is consisting of or amounting to a large but indefinite number. How to use many in a sentence.
We use the quantifiers much, many, a lot of, lots of to talk about quantities, amounts and degree. We can use them with a noun (as a determiner) or without a noun (as a pronoun). …
Amounting to or consisting of a large indefinite number: many friends. 2. Being one of a large indefinite number; numerous: many a child; many another day. 1. The majority of the people; the masses: "The many fail, the one succeeds" (Tennyson). 2. A large indefinite number: A good many of the workers had the flu.