Language,
especially familiar language, seems almost insufficient to capture the transcendent, to reflect truth in all of its complexity.
Not exact matches
Memrise, if you're not already
familiar with it, is an amazing tool to help people learn anything from science facts to a foreign
language more quickly using fun associations to make new words or ideas stick (I've used it personally and absolutely endorse it for memorizing new vocabulary
especially).
Cloth or board books,
especially intriguing with pictures of faces or
familiar objects, let then, practice object - recognition and instill basic ideas of
language.
Especially avid readers notice different styles, even more so if they are
familiar with the sound of the source
language — I know I do.
In her drawings, paintings and artist's books, San Francisco - based Tauba Auerbach investigates the relationship between spoken and written
language, focusing
especially on those points where the
familiar structure begins to break down or slip.
While you will certainly have to use technical
language in your resume (for example, in your list of technical skills), avoid using too much jargon,
especially acronyms and terms that not everyone will be
familiar with.