THING OF THE WEEK

BARMY… Are you ‘areet’ with the meaning of the words ‘barm’, ‘lickle’, ‘skriking’, and ‘cruckled’? The use of local dialects around Greater Manchester could determine how strongly a person associates with the region, according to sociolinguists. Dr Erin Currie and Dr Rob Drummond of MMU have been conducting research since last year, into the region’s distinct ways of talking, recording more than 100 interviews with people on how they speak and what it means to be a part of Greater Manchester. An exhibition of the findings opened yesterday at Manchester Central Library, and you can still add your voice and views to the research at http://www.manchestervoices.org/

 


World Temperature

SWEATY STAT… Been feeling a bit hot under the collar this week? Temperatures soaring to 30 degrees is usually enough for us to handle in the North West, but it’s not a sweat-patch on the highest temperatures we’ve ever had in the UK, and certainly not for some of the more roasting climes around the world. Globehunters has created an infographic showing how hot it can get in various countries. The highest global temperature ever recorded was 56.7 degrees in July 1913, and the UK once managed to notch a 38.5-degree heatwave. Best get out the suntan lotion… https://www.globehunters.com/blog/feelin–kinda-hot–just-how-hot-can-it-get-around-the-world-.htm#EEE

 


THING University Of Manchester Bioenergy Comic

COMIC RELIEF… Scientists at the University of Manchester are using the medium of the comic strip to illustrate the ins and outs of bioenergy, in an effort to dispel the myths and misconceptions. The comic was created by a group of artists and researchers from the University’s Supergen Bioenergy Hub, an academic-industry-policy partnership funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council. The 24-page graphic novel is packed with details addressing the benefits and concerns around bioenergy and climate change, with imagined projections of different futures depending on our actions now – spoiler alert, not acting now doesn’t exactly end in utopia. The team see it being used at workshops, science festivals and even pubs. If your local isn’t stocking it yet, you can read the comic online here: http://www.supergen-bioenergy.net/comic/

 


TOWER TOO FAR… The latest tower proposed in Manchester city centre has polarised opinion, if the lively Place North West readers’ comments are anything to go by. Responses to the SimpsonHaugh-designed 35-storey student accommodation building for Unite swung from “U-G-L-Y” to praising it as the practice’s best ever work. A not-very-scientific Twitter poll showed that views really are split. If it’s got such a mixed reception even from the development community, it remains to be seen what Manchester’s planning committee is going to think…

1 5 NWS 3

 


BUILDING BOOM… After a glut of planning approvals, it’s great to see so much evidence of projects on site. Some favourites this week, including the near completion of a facility for the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, a Youth Zone in Chorley, and The Christie’s investment in proton beam technology. It’s all go…

 

And a London scaffolding timelapse, just for good measure. There’s “Liverpool” in the street name after all…

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