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- https://socialsci.libretexts.org/Courses/Delaware_County_Community_College/Cultivating_Possibilities_through_Literacy_2e/03%3A_Reading_Self-Reflexively/3.01%3A_Reading_Self-Reflexively-_An_IntroductionFor instance, looking into the etymology of the word literacy, we discover that it derived from the word “literate.” In the 1400s, the word literate entered the English language from the Latin root wo...For instance, looking into the etymology of the word literacy, we discover that it derived from the word “literate.” In the 1400s, the word literate entered the English language from the Latin root word litera and had a sense and meaning of “being educated” or “having knowledge of alphabetic letters.” By 1894, the sense and meaning of the word literate evolved to include one of its present-day meanings - “one who can read and write” (Harper 1).
- https://socialsci.libretexts.org/Courses/Bakersfield_College/Intercultural_Communication_(Pruett-Bakersfield_College)/01%3A_Foundations_of_Intercultural_Communication/1.04%3A_Why_Study_Intercultural_CommunicationIt would be easy to be overcome by the complexities of the things that you do not know or understand about another culture, but regardless of who we are communicating with, one fact is important to re...It would be easy to be overcome by the complexities of the things that you do not know or understand about another culture, but regardless of who we are communicating with, one fact is important to remember: the communication choices we make determine the personal, national, and international outcomes that follow.
- https://socialsci.libretexts.org/Under_Construction/Purgatory/Cultivating_Possibilities_through_Literacy/03%3A_Reading_Self-Reflexively/3.01%3A_An_IntroductionFor instance, looking into the etymology of the word literacy, we discover that it derived from the word “literate.” In the 1400s, the word literate entered the English language from the Latin root wo...For instance, looking into the etymology of the word literacy, we discover that it derived from the word “literate.” In the 1400s, the word literate entered the English language from the Latin root word litera and had a sense and meaning of “being educated” or “having knowledge of alphabetic letters.” By 1894, the sense and meaning of the word literate evolved to include one of its present-day meanings - “one who can read and write” (Harper 1).
- https://socialsci.libretexts.org/Courses/Pueblo_Community_College/GT-SS3%3A_Intercultural_Communication/01%3A_Culture_and_Communication/1.01%3A_Why_Study_Intercultural_CommunicationWe live in a rapidly changing world with larger forces driving us to interact with others who are culturally different from ourselves. It would be easy to be overcome by the complexities of the things...We live in a rapidly changing world with larger forces driving us to interact with others who are culturally different from ourselves. It would be easy to be overcome by the complexities of the things that you do not know or understand about another culture, but regardless of who we are communicating with, one fact is important to remember: the communication choices we make determine the personal, national, and international outcomes that follow.
- https://socialsci.libretexts.org/Under_Construction/Purgatory/Cultivating_Possibilities_through_Literacy/03%3A_Reading_Self-Reflexively
- https://socialsci.libretexts.org/Courses/Delaware_County_Community_College/Cultivating_Possibilities_through_Literacy_2e/03%3A_Reading_Self-Reflexively
- https://socialsci.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Communication/Intercultural_Communication/Intercultural_Communication_for_the_Community_College_(Karen_Krumrey-Fulks)/01%3A_Chapters/1.01%3A_Why_Study_Intercultural_CommunicationWe live in a rapidly changing world with larger forces driving us to interact with others who are culturally different from ourselves. It would be easy to be overcome by the complexities of the things...We live in a rapidly changing world with larger forces driving us to interact with others who are culturally different from ourselves. It would be easy to be overcome by the complexities of the things that you do not know or understand about another culture, but regardless of who we are communicating with, one fact is important to remember: the communication choices we make determine the personal, national, and international outcomes that follow.