Fun Facts About the English Language

23 illustrated articles about the quirks, history, and hidden stories of the English language. From Shakespeare's invented words to why β€œghoti” could be pronounced β€œfish.” No textbooks. No quizzes. Just genuinely interesting stories about the language we use every day.

The Most Common Learner Traps 🚫 Ignoring tones "Context will handle it" β€” no, it won't 🚫 Skipping characters entirely "I'll just learn pinyin" β€” you'll hit a wall The first step to fixing a problem is knowing it exists. Every single mistake on this list is fixable. The learners who improve are the ones who face them head-on.
Chinese Learning6 min read

The 6 Mistakes Every English Speaker Makes When Learning Chinese

From ignoring tones to obsessing over grammar rules that don't matter, these are the traps that slow down almost every learner. Recognizing them early saves months of frustration.

June 12, 2026
Chinese Practice β€” No Plane Ticket Required πŸ“± Phone Change phone language to Chinese Follow Chinese creators on social media Use Pleco for instant lookups πŸ’» Computer Watch Chinese shows with Chinese subtitles Read graded readers or 小纒书 posts Practice writing characters daily 30 minutes a day beats 3 hours on Saturday. Daily exposure > periodic cramming. Every single time. The best practice routine is the one you actually do.
Chinese Learning6 min read

How to Practice Chinese When You're Not in China

No immersion environment? No problem. You can build a surprisingly effective Chinese practice routine from anywhere β€” here's how, with zero budget and no language partner required.

June 8, 2026
English Idioms β€” If You Took Them Literally 🐱🐢 Raining cats & dogs Heavy rain πŸͺ£πŸ¦΅ Kick the bucket To die πŸˆπŸ“¦ Let the cat out Reveal a secret πŸ§ˆβ¬†οΈ Butter someone up To flatter The Real Origins (Probably) "Raining cats and dogs" β€” from 17th-century London, where heavy rains would flood streets and wash dead animals out of gutters. Grim, but plausible. "Kick the bucket" β€” possibly from slaughterhouse practice, where animals were hung from a beam called a "bucket." Their final kicks gave us the idiom. "Let the cat out of the bag" β€” from the old scam of selling a cat in a sack and claiming it was a piglet. Letting the cat out revealed the fraud.
Language Fun5 min read

Raining Cats and Dogs and Other Linguistic Lunacies: Where English Idioms Actually Come From

Why do we 'kick the bucket' when we die? Why does 'letting the cat out of the bag' mean revealing a secret? The real origins of English idioms are often stranger than the phrases themselves.

June 5, 2026
Same Radical, Related Meanings ζ°΅ ζ°΄ (water) radical β†’ 江 ζ΅· ι…’ ζ΄— ζ²³ ζ²Ή ζ»‘ ζ‰Œ 手 (hand) radical β†’ 打 把 推 拉 ζŠ“ ζ‰Ύ 扫 Learn 40 radicals. Instantly recognize patterns in thousands of characters. Every character you see with ζ°΅is probably water-related. Every character with ζ‰Œprobably involves an action with hands.
Chinese Learning6 min read

Radicals Are the Cheat Code for Learning Chinese Characters

Learning 214 radicals sounds like extra work. But knowing just the top 40 will dramatically speed up every character you learn afterward. Here's why, and where to start.

June 5, 2026
πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§ British vs. American English πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§ British πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ American liftelevator flatapartment biscuitcookie autumnfall footballsoccer colourcolor centrecenter chipsfries crispschips Yes, chipsβ†’fries and crispsβ†’chips. This has caused actual confusion in restaurants.
Language History5 min read

Two Nations Divided by a Common Language: Why American and British English Drifted Apart

Color vs colour, elevator vs lift, soccer vs football. The Atlantic Ocean didn't just separate two continents β€” it split English into two increasingly divergent dialects. And Noah Webster had a lot to do with it.

June 3, 2026
The Four Mandarin Tones mā     mΓ‘     mǎ     mΓ       β€”   Four completely different words "mother"   "hemp"   "horse"   "to scold" If you ignore tones, you are not speaking Chinese. You are making Chinese-shaped noises.
Chinese Learning6 min read

Chinese Tones Are Not Optional: A Guide for English Speakers

English uses pitch for emotion, not meaning. In Chinese, pitch changes which word you're saying entirely. Here's how to train your ear and your voice to get tones right.

June 3, 2026
Palindrome vs. Anagram β€” A Tale of Two Word Games PALINDROME Reads the same forwards & backwards RACECAR β†’ racecar ← "A man, a plan, a canal β€” Panama!" ANAGRAM Rearrange letters to form new words LISTEN β†’ SILENT Rearrange the letters "Dormitory" β†’ "Dirty Room" The Sator Square β€” 1st Century AD S A T O R A R E P O T E N E T O P E R A R O T A S Found carved into walls across the Roman Empire. Reads the same up, down, left, right.
Language Fun5 min read

Racecar Spelled Backwards Is Racecar: The Joyful Obsession of Palindromes and Anagrams

A man, a plan, a canal β€” Panama! From ancient Roman word squares to modern anagram competitions, humans have always loved rearranging letters to reveal hidden meanings.

June 1, 2026
Building a Character from Components ε₯½ "good" β€” hǎo = ε₯³ + 子 δΌ‘ "rest" β€” xiΕ« = δΊ»+ 木 (person + tree) Stop memorizing lines. Start noticing stories. A person (δΊ») leaning against a tree (木) = rest (δΌ‘). That's not a mnemonic trick β€” that's how the character was created.
Chinese Learning7 min read

How to Actually Memorize Chinese Characters (Without Losing Your Mind)

The brute-force method of writing each character 100 times works, but it's slow and miserable. Here are five techniques that take less time and actually stick.

June 1, 2026
The Silent Letter Hall of Shame Knee Psychology Bomb Gnome Write Honest Sland Tsunami Why do these letters exist in the spelling? 1. They used to be pronounced (knee β†’ "k-nee" in Old English) 2. Renaissance scholars added them to look Latin (debt from debitum) 3. They were borrowed from other languages (tsunami from Japanese) 4. English spelling froze but pronunciation kept moving
Language Fun5 min read

The Conspiracy of Silent Letters: Why English Keeps Letters It Doesn't Pronounce

Knee, psychology, pneumonia, debt, island, hour, honest, gnome, knife β€” all start with letters you're not supposed to say. Who put them there, and why won't they leave?

May 30, 2026
The Great Gender Disappearing Act Old English (1000 AD) β†’ Middle English (1300 AD) β†’ Modern English OLD ENGLISH Masculine β€’ Feminine Neuter se mann β€’ sΔ“o sunne β€’ ΓΎΓ¦t wΔ«f MIDDLE ENGLISH Gender collapsing... Norse mixing in the man β€’ the sonne β€’ the wif MODERN ENGLISH No grammatical gender! Natural gender only the man β€’ the sun β€’ the wife The Vikings Did This (Mostly) Old English and Old Norse shared words but had DIFFERENT genders for them. Speakers solved this by... just dropping gender entirely. Simple fix.
Language History5 min read

Der, Die, Das... Nothing? Why English Dumped Grammatical Gender

French has gendered nouns. German has three genders. Spanish and Italian gender everything from tables to democracy. So why did English β€” a language descended from heavily gendered Old English β€” drop the whole system?

May 28, 2026
Pangram Hall of Fame The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. 35 letters β€” the classic, used for typing practice and font previews since the 1880s Pack my box with five dozen liquor jugs. 32 letters β€” efficient and oddly specific about the box-packing instructions Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow. 29 letters β€” the goth pangram. Mysterious, dramatic, unnecessarily intense Waltz, bad nymph, for quick jigs vex. 28 letters β€” all 26 letters with room to spare. A scandalous dancing instruction
Language Fun4 min read

The Quick Brown Fox and Friends: The Strange Art of the Pangram

'The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog' β€” you've typed it a hundred times. But who came up with it? And what are the other contenders for the perfect pangram?

May 26, 2026
English Letter Frequency β€” The E Empire E 12.7% T 9.1% A 8.2% O 7.5% I 7.0% N 6.7% S 6.3% H 6.1% R 6.0% D 4.3% L 3.9% Z 0.1%
Language Fun5 min read

E is Everywhere: Why One Letter Rules the English Alphabet

The letter E appears in roughly 12.7% of all English text β€” nearly twice as often as the next most common letter. The novel Gadsby (1939) famously avoids it entirely. Why is E the undisputed monarch of English letters?

May 24, 2026
Contranyms: Words That Mean Their Own Opposite SANCTION 1. To approve βœ“ | 2. To penalize βœ— CLEAVE 1. To split apart βœ‚οΈ | 2. To cling together 🀝 DUST 1. To remove dust 🧹 | 2. To sprinkle with dust ✨ OVERSIGHT 1. Supervision πŸ‘€ | 2. Failure to notice πŸ™ˆ WEATHER 1. To wear away 🌧️ | 2. To withstand ⛰️ SCREEN 1. To show πŸ“Ί | 2. To hide πŸͺŸ LEFT 1. Departed 🚢 | 2. Remaining 🌿 FAST 1. Quick πŸƒ | 2. Fixed in place βš“
Language Fun5 min read

The Words That Betrayed Themselves: Contranyms β€” When a Word Means Its Own Opposite

You can 'dust' a cake with sugar or 'dust' your shelves to remove dust. You can 'sanction' an action or impose 'sanctions' against a country. Welcome to the world of contranyms β€” English words with two completely contradictory meanings.

May 22, 2026
Cockney Rhyming Slang β€” A Visual Dictionary Apples and Pears β†’ Stairs Dog and Bone β†’ Phone Trouble and Strife β†’ Wife Porky Pies β†’ Lies Loaf of Bread β†’ Head Butcher's Hook β†’ Look China Plate β†’ Mate (friend) Ruby Murray β†’ Curry Bees and Honey β†’ Money Step 1: Find a rhyme. Step 2: Drop the rhyming word. Step 3: Confuse everyone.
Language Fun5 min read

Apples and Pears, Dog and Bone: The Secret Language of London's East End

Cockney rhyming slang started as a way for market traders to talk without customers understanding. Today, phrases like 'telling porkies' and 'use your loaf' are embedded in everyday British English.

May 19, 2026
Shakespeare's Word Factory William 1564–1616 bedroom lonely swagger gossip assassination addiction eyeball fashionable cold-blooded 1,700+ words first appeared in his writing. Here are just a few.
Language History5 min read

Shakespeare Didn't Just Write Plays β€” He Invented Over 1,700 English Words You Use Every Day

From 'bedroom' to 'lonely' to 'swagger', the Bard of Avon was a one-man word factory. But did he really invent all those words, or was he just the first person to write them down?

May 17, 2026
The Great Vowel Shift (1350–1700) Middle English Modern English bite β†’ pronounced "beet" bite β†’ pronounced "bait" shift ↑ house β†’ pronounced "hoos" house β†’ pronounced "haus" shift ↑ All long vowels moved UP in the mouth. Spelling froze. Pronunciation ran away.
Language History6 min read

Why Is English Spelling So Weird? The Great Vowel Shift and Other Catastrophes

If 'through' and 'threw' sound the same, and 'cough' rhymes with 'off' but 'bough' rhymes with 'cow', what on earth happened to English spelling? The story involves plague, printing presses, and a 300-year pronunciation earthquake called the Great Vowel Shift.

May 15, 2026
Q + U = Almost Always Together Q Helpless alone + U 99.9% of the time KW The sound The Rare Rebels: Q Without U Qi (Chinese: "life force") Β· Qat (Arabic: a plant) Β· Faqir (Arabic: a mystic) Qadi (Arabic: a judge) Β· Qintar (Albanian currency) Β· Qoph (Hebrew letter) All either borrowings from Arabic/Semitic languages, or from Chinese Pinyin romanization.
Language Fun4 min read

Q Is the Neediest Letter in English: Why It Almost Always Needs a U

Q is the only letter in English that can't appear without a specific partner (U, of course). Qi, qat, faqir β€” the few Q-without-U words come from Arabic or Chinese. Why is Q so helplessly dependent?

April 26, 2026
Mondegreens vs. Eggcorns β€” A Field Guide MONDEGREEN Mishearing something (usually lyrics) "Excuse me while I kiss this guy" Actual lyric: "Excuse me while I kiss the sky" β€” Jimi Hendrix "The girl with colitis goes by" Actual: "The girl with kaleidoscope eyes" β€” The Beatles EGGCORN Reshaping a word to make more "sense" "For all intensive purposes" Actual: "For all intents and purposes" "Eggcorn" itself! A mishearing of "acorn" β€” and the source of the term The Origin Stories "Mondegreen": Coined by Sylvia Wright (1954), who as a child misheard a Scottish ballad: "They hae slain the Earl o' Moray / And laid him on the green" β†’ "And Lady Mondegreen" "Eggcorn": Coined by linguist Geoffrey Pullum (2003) after a woman wrote "eggcorn" for "acorn" β€” because acorns are egg-shaped seeds, so "egg corn" makes a kind of semantic sense.
Language Fun5 min read

Eggcorns and Mondegreens: The Linguistics of Mishearing Things and Why Your Brain Does It

If you've ever sung 'excuse me while I kiss this guy' instead of 'the sky', or said 'for all intensive purposes' instead of 'intents and purposes', congratulations β€” you've experienced a mondegreen and an eggcorn.

April 22, 2026
How Many English Words? The Ranges Vary Wildly OED: ~600,000 Oxford English Dictionary Includes obsolete words Merriam-Webster: ~470,000 Current usage focus New words added constantly Estimate: 1,000,000+ Including scientific terms Chemical names alone = ∞ The Counting Problems β—‡ Is "run" (verb) and "run" (noun) one word or two? (Dictionary says at least 645 meanings.) β—‡ Do we count "unfriend" (2009) but not "forsooth" (obsolete)? Who decides what's "current"? β—‡ Scientific names: you can name a chemical compound arbitrarily long β€” does that count? β—‡ English creates ~1,000 new words per year. By the time you finish counting, the number changed.
Language History5 min read

Nobody Knows How Many Words English Actually Has β€” and Here's Why It's Impossible to Count

Is it 170,000? 600,000? Over a million? The answer depends entirely on what you count as a 'word'. Is 'run' one word or dozens? Are obsolete words still words? What about 'lol'?

April 18, 2026
The Book of Saint Albans (1486) β€” The Source πŸ¦β€β¬› A murderof crows πŸ¦‰ A parliamentof owls 🦊 A skulkof foxes 🐝 A gristof bees 🐸 An armyof frogs 🐧 A waddleof penguins 🦩 A flamboyanceof flamingos 🦏 A crashof rhinos πŸ¦’ A towerof giraffes πŸ– A sounderof pigs 🦑 A ceteof badgers πŸ‰ A thunderof dragons* *Not in the original Book of St Albans, but added by later enthusiasts. Most of these "terms of venery" were never used in serious communication outside hunting manuals.
Language Fun5 min read

A Murder of Crows, a Parliament of Owls: The 15th-Century Craze for Inventing Animal Group Names

Who decided that a group of crows is a 'murder'? The answer involves bored 15th-century nobles, a book about hunting, and a linguistic tradition that we've kept alive for 500 years for no good reason except that it's wonderful.

April 14, 2026
Mary Anning β€” The Real "She" Who Sold Seashells She sells sea-shells on the sea-shore Mary Anning 1799–1847 Fossil collector & paleontologist Discovered first complete ichthyosaur skeleton at age 12 Found first plesiosaur ever Sold fossils to support family More Historic Twisters "Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers" β†’ Published 1813, by John Harris "How much wood would a woodchuck chuck" β†’ From a 1902 song "The Woodchuck Song" Tongue twisters exploit "phonological neighbors" β€” words that differ by one sound. Your brain plans the s-sound, but your tongue is still recovering from the last sh-sound. Crash.
Language Fun5 min read

She Sells Seashells and the Science of Speech: The Real History Behind Famous Tongue Twisters

Tongue twisters aren't just playground games β€” many have fascinating historical origins. 'She sells seashells' is about a real fossil hunter named Mary Anning who revolutionized paleontology.

April 10, 2026
Top 10 Words β‰ˆ 25% of All English Text the ~5% be ~3% to ~3% of ~2.5% and ~2.5% a ~2% in ~2% that ~1.5% have ~1.5% I ~1.5%
Language Fun4 min read

The 100 Most Common Words in English Do Almost All the Heavy Lifting

The word 'the' alone accounts for about 5% of all English text. The top 10 words account for 25%. The top 100 words? Nearly 50%. We obsess over rare vocabulary while common words do all the real work.

March 30, 2026
Untranslatable English serendipity spam bromance gobbledygook awkward bully Many of these are now borrowed globally β€” serendipity exists in Japanese as セレンディピティ (serendipiti)
Language Fun4 min read

Serendipity, Gobbledygook, and Bromance: English Words That Don't Translate

Every language has words that refuse to be translated cleanly. English has plenty of its own β€” from 'serendipity' to 'spam' to 'bully' β€” words so culturally specific that other languages just borrow them wholesale.

March 25, 2026
The Plural Zoo β€” Where Rules Go to Die Goose β†’ Geese βœ“ Old English umlaut plural Moose β†’ Moose βœ— Not meese. From Algonquian. Mouse β†’ Mice βœ“ Umlaut plural (same as goose) House β†’ Houses βœ— Not hice. Why? Nobody knows. The Old English Plural System (circa 1000 AD) Old English had SIX different plural endings: -as, -an, -a, -u, -βˆ…, and vowel changes (umlaut). Over centuries, -as won out and became the modern -s. But a handful of umlaut plurals survived: manβ†’men, womanβ†’women, footβ†’feet, toothβ†’teeth, gooseβ†’geese, mouseβ†’mice, louseβ†’lice "Moose" was borrowed from Algonquian languages in the 1600s β€” too late for the umlaut train. "House" simply wasn't one of the words that got the vowel-change treatment. No deeper logic.
Language History4 min read

Moose, Meese, Mooses? Why English Plurals Are a Complete Mess

Goose becomes geese, but moose doesn't become meese. Mouse becomes mice, but house doesn't become hice. The history of English plurals is a story of invasions, vowel shifts, and stubborn irregularity.

March 20, 2026
The Improbable Journey of "OK" 1839 Boston newspaper fad: "oll korrect" 1840 Martin Van Buren "Old Kinderhook" 1870s Telegraph operators adopt OK as shorthand 1960s NASA Mission Control: "A-OK" Today Understood in virtually every language Competing Origin Theories (All Debunked) βœ— Choctaw "okeh" (it is so) β€” folk etymology, no evidence βœ— Scottish "och aye" (oh yes) β€” implausible phonetic drift βœ— French "au quai" (to the dock) β€” never used this way in French βœ— Greek "ola kala" (all good) β€” no evidence of transmission path βœ“ The true origin: "oll korrect" β€” a deliberate misspelling joke. It's that simple.
Language History5 min read

OK: The Two-Letter Word That Conquered the World

OK might be the most successful word in human history. It's understood in nearly every language on Earth. But its origin involves a 1830s Boston newspaper fad, a misspelling joke, and a presidential campaign.

March 15, 2026
English Vocabulary by Origin Total Dictionary French/Norman 29% Latin 29% Germanic 26% Greek 6% Other 10% BUT: 100 most-used words β‰ˆ97% Germanic origin Words you actually say every day (the, be, to, of, and, I, you...) are Germanic.
Language History5 min read

English Is a Germanic Language That Forgot It Was Germanic

Linguistically, English is firmly Germanic β€” its basic vocabulary, grammar, and DNA all trace back to the same roots as German and Dutch. So why does it look so much like French?

March 10, 2026
Longest Words in English β€” A Relative Scale HONORIFICABILITUDINITATIBUS (27) β€” Shakespeare, Love's Labour's Lost ANTIDISESTABLISHMENTARIANISM (28) β€” Opposition to disestablishing the Church of England FLOCCINAUCINIHILIPILIFICATION (29) β€” The act of estimating something as worthless PNEUMONOULTRAMICROSCOPICSILICOVOLCANOCONIOSIS (45) β€” A lung disease caused by volcanic dust SUPERCALIFRAGILISTICEXPIALIDOCIOUS (34) β€” Mary Poppins. Something to say when you have nothing to say. Chemical name for titin: 189,819 letters. Takes over 3 hours to pronounce.
Language Fun4 min read

From Antidisestablishmentarianism to Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis: The Arms Race for the Longest Word

Who decides what the 'longest English word' is? Do technical chemical names count (the protein titin has a 189,819-letter name)? What about words created specifically to be long?

March 5, 2026
The Miracle of Child Language Acquisition 0–6 mo Cooing "goo-goo" 6–12 mo Babbling "ba-ba-ba" 12–18 mo First words "mama" 18–24 mo Two-word combos "more milk" 3 years ~1,000 words Full sentences The Mystery Children learn ~10 words per day from ages 1–6 β€” WITHOUT formal instruction. They produce sentences they've NEVER heard before ("I goed to the store" = overgeneralization). They learn grammatical rules nobody explicitly teaches them. By age 5, near-native mastery. Noam Chomsky called this "the poverty of the stimulus" β€” input is too limited to explain output.
Language History5 min read

How Do Children Learn a Language Without Anyone Teaching Them? The Greatest Mystery in Linguistics

By age 3, a child knows about 1,000 words and can form complex sentences in their native language β€” all without formal instruction. No flashcards. No grammar drills. How does a toddler's brain pull this off?

March 1, 2026