L'ARTICOLO DAVANTI AI COGNOMI
sì o no?
✍🏻😎
#scrittura#writingtips#wearewriting
⏩ La risposta è NO, non si mette. Ma, eh, nella nostra lingua bisogna spesso distinguere.
✅ Sì davanti a nomi di personaggi famosi: il Manzoni, per esempio. Ma pare non ci vada (perché non è chiaro) se il nome del personaggio è familiare: Colombo invece che il Colombo. Poi, chi decide se ci sia più familiare Alessandro o Cristoforo?
✅ No davanti ai nomi di personaggi stranieri (Stevenson e non lo Stevenson). Forse perché non ci sono familiari?
✅ Si sosteneva che andasse messo davanti ai cognomi femminili (perché mai?), per esempio La Pausini e non Pausini. Per fortuna questa regola sta decadendo.
✅ L'articolo si metterebbe - ma non è una regola - davanti ai nomi di aziende (La Bialetti).
🚀La scelta migliore su cui molti concordano? Non mettere l'articolo davanti ai cognomi. Non si sbaglia mai.
@writingway
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Honored by Prof. Hiroshi Takahashi's generosity in sharing his AAS Review Paper on land-surface influences on Asian monsoon precipitation and recommending the full special issue. Grateful for such support in advancing #climatescience ! Explore his study: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00376-026-5209-3#AAS
via @aasjournal.bsky.social - Adv. Atmos. Sci.
At the Ocean-Monsoon Conference 2026, @agturnermonsoon.bsky.social of the University of Reading presented a striking visual: the same location in India, captured under drought and active monsoon conditions. Two extremes. One region. A powerful reminder of what is at stake. 🧵👇#AAS#Climatescience
via @aasjournal.bsky.social - Adv. Atmos. Sci.
#Scientific_American🇺🇸📕[PDF]⬇️
#December2025
#Monthly_Magazines
For learning, for free(dom).
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NASA faces a stalled Mars sample-return mission as funding reshapes priorities in #TechPolicy, while a promising mRNA-based personalized cancer vaccine struggles amid shrinking research budgets in the U.S., underscoring a rising #HealthCrisis. Scientists also warn that deepfakes demand new “face-ownership” rights, adding momentum to global #AIRegulation. Fresh insights into black-hole limits and rare-earth formation expand our cosmic and geologic imagination, even as #ClimateScience pushes oil and gas giants to pivot toward plastics. New antidepressant treatments and studies on small daily joys highlight a parallel #MentalHealth shift across society.
#The_National_Geographic🇺🇸📕[PDF]⬇️
#December2025
#Monthly_Magazines
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This issue captures a world in transition, from ancient engineering puzzles to the fragile future of memory. Stunning visuals highlight global migration, ecological risk and cultural resilience, while scientists push deeper into #ClimateScience and #Neuroscience. A precise Mesopotamian map surprises historians, and a tribute to Jane Goodall reflects on her transformative legacy in #WildlifeResearch. The “Pictures of the Year” series showcases unforgettable scenes shaped by conflict, migration and #GlobalCulture. As melting ice reveals prehistoric secrets, explorers race against time, reminding us how fragile our world is in the age of #EarthChange and #FutureTech.
#The_Science🇺🇸📕[PDF]⬇️
16 #October2025
#Weekly_Magazines
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This week’s Science dives deep into the frontiers of #Nanoscopy, visualizing neural circuits with stunning 3D precision. From Arctic #Permafrost preserving ancient RNA viruses to #Ant colonies evolving architectural immunity, the issue spans from the microscopic to the planetary. Groundbreaking work tracks #SeaLevel change over 4.5 million years and explores durable #Hydrogen production membranes and electric control in #2Dmaterials. The “#ColdStorage” feature warns of hidden viral archives in melting ice—a chilling insight into #ClimateScience and future pandemics. A visionary issue linking biology, chemistry, and global sustainability through the lens of innovation.