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Expanding the vocabulary: Bibliophagist

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Learn English with Idioms – Break a leg

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The Birth of Graph Theory

In 1736, a mathematician in the city of Königsberg was asked a curious question. The city was divided by a river and connected by seven bridges. Residents amused themselves by attempting a simple walk: cross every bridge exactly once and return home without repeating any. Many tried. None succeeded. The puzzle eventually reached a Swiss…
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Expanding the vocabulary: Posthaste

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Learn English with Idioms – Best of both worlds

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Combinatorics: The Mathematics of Choice

Every day feels full of decisions. What to say. What to prioritise. Which path to take. We experience choice as something psychological, even emotional. A matter of preference, intuition, or circumstance. Mathematics sees something different. It sees structure. Long before probability theory, mathematicians confronted a deceptively simple question. This occurred long before algorithms and artificial…
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Expanding the vocabulary: Mycophile

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Learn English with Idioms – Apple of discord

#Idioms #tefl #englishlearning #englishteacher #lingabites #English #tutor #tutors #tutoring #onlinetutor #tutoringonline #learnenglish #englishlearningeasy #privatetutor #privatetutoring #tutoringservices #literacy #understanding #language #meaning #reading #readingtutor #writing #pronunciation #speakingenglish #elearning
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What Actually Holds Systems Together

At first glance, a set is a lonely thing. It is a collection of elements, neatly grouped, carefully defined, and entirely self-contained. A set of numbers. A set of people. A set of possible outcomes. Each element exists, but nothing happens yet. There is no movement, no interaction, no consequence. Just membership. On their own,…
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Expanding the vocabulary: Euphemism
