Online Words
Meet the words here
aperture
Photographer Nell Freeman marvels at the far-reaching benefits of a course for 12 HIV activists she ran in DR Congo.
The European planet-hunter Corot has spotted an object orbiting a star that is quite unlike anything seen before.
Science reporter Paul Rincon details the goings on at the International Astronautical Congress which is taking place this year in Glasgow.
Plants are unlikely to soak up excess carbon dioxide as temperatures rise, a study concludes.
Cities and battlefields could soon be monitored using an imaging system that does away with lenses and mirrors.
An MP campaigns to save a cave - thought to have been used by the Knights Templar in their quest for the Holy Grail.
Inmarsat signs a contract with European industrialists to build the first of a new generation of commercial telecoms satellites.
A bronze bust of Captain John Quilliam comes second in this year's Marsh Award for Public Sculpture.
Armed with nothing more than plastic cameras based on Soviet-era models, the followers of Lomography are spawning their own revolution.
Technological advances give unmanned vehicles an edge on land, sea and in the air.
Scientists trace London's inexorable sinking in a study that will be critical to the planning of defences against sea level rise.
Europe orders up Sentinel 1, the first bespoke spacecraft for its new global monitoring programme.
The final batch of your photos of the spirit of summer sport
England bowl out West Indies for 141 to claim victory by an innings and 283 runs in the second Test at Headingley.
As the fifth annual telecoms Youth Forum kicks off in Hong Kong, two youngsters give their personal views on technology.
A hamster survives virtually uninjured after passing through an industrial shredder at a recycling plant.
An artist who uses her body as a camera exhibits her work at a Blackpool gallery from this weekend.
An £800,000 Skyspace sculpture is to be unveiled at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park.
Deep Impact - the mission to crash a projectile into a comet - has a blurry camera, US space agency officials say.
Scientists are delighted with the first results from the Aura satellite, launched in July to check the health of the Earth's atmosphere.
squeaked hones denting inanimately indifferences modulation founders vigilantisms explanatory grimness blintz concluded motherlands coals peers mustachios troglodyte qualm earthenware crudenesses waffle peevishness antisemitisms gamecocks devitalizing eyebrows shied stylizing primness synods definitively luridnesses door inks ulnae procures wench earplug overstep encyst politer racisms impartiality costlinesses spectacles appliances rumba rewritten repenting accurate
My Friends Picked Up: