2024: A Year In Review

Here’s a look back on some of the most impactful events of 2024.

BING NEWS:
  • Unique among 'Person of the Year' designees, Donald Trump gets a fact-check from Time magazine
    Donald Trump got something this year that no other person designated Time magazine's Person of the Year had ever received ...
    12/13/2024 - 4:18 pm | View Link
  • China's GDP growth expected around 5% this year, senior official says
    China's economy is expected to grow by about 5% this year, the deputy director of the country's central financial and economic affairs commission said on Saturday.
    12/13/2024 - 12:20 pm | View Link
  • Macy's adds to list of store closures, says it will close 65 this year
    Macy's said it will close 65 stores this year, an increase from the 50 locations it previously announced it would shutter by the end of the fiscal year. The closures are part of its plan to eliminate ...
    12/13/2024 - 7:22 am | View Link
  • Obesity dipped in U.S. adults last year for the first time in more than a decade
    Obesity dipped in U.S. adults last year for the first time in more than a decade, research found. That might be due, in part, to weight loss drugs like Ozempic.
    12/13/2024 - 6:46 am | View Link
  • Donald Trump's Time 'Person of the Year' Interview Fact Checked
    Donald Trump's "Person of the Year" interview included multiple false and misleading claims about his record and policy issues.
    12/13/2024 - 4:18 am | View Link
  • More
BING SEARCH:
  • grammar
    The answer to your title question is general reference: 'mid-year exams' (or rarely, 'middle-of-year exams'), but 'end-of-year exams' or less commonly 'year-end exams'. As to why, perhaps it's because 'end-year' would seem to imply 1918 or 1945 say rather than December, but people feel uncomfortable using 'year-mid' as 'mid' as a noun is ...
    12/13/2024 - 9:05 am | View Website
  • prepositions
    Use of ‘the year’ is also optional here: in modern usage, ‘…in 1732’ would be more common, but ‘the year’ adds emphasis and formality; in historical usage ‘…the year 1732’ was more standard. On the other hand, if specifying the year by an event, then ‘of’ is correct:
    12/13/2024 - 8:00 am | View Website
  • Year Division by Quarters: any terms to express halves of years or ...
    It is of course possible to find special terms, but they are not in frequent use. What is usually done is to specify a fraction of a year or a number of days, weeks, or months. One might say "a third of a year" or "four months." Fractions using sixths or twelfths are rare. Most would say "seven months" rather than "seven twelfths of a year."
    12/13/2024 - 7:17 am | View Website
  • Which one is correct: "1yr" or "1yr." or "1 yr"?
    As reported by the Oxford Living Dictionaries (and similarly by the copy of the New Oxford American English that was installed on my Mac Mini) yr. is an English abbreviation, but it could be both the abbreviation of year or years, while yrs. is the abbreviation for years or yours.
    12/13/2024 - 1:12 am | View Website
  • What are the rules for pronunciation of years in English?
    Worth noting is the fact that the years 1-999 are usually suffixed with "AD" to make it clear that we are talking about a year rather than an arbitrary figure. Post-1000 years do not require this verbal signposting as the use of this unusual convention makes it clear that these are years.
    12/12/2024 - 5:20 pm | View Website
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Welcome to Wopular

Wopular is an online newspaper rack, giving you a summary view of the top headlines from the top news sites.

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