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US COVID-19 cases and deaths by state. How is the nation faring against COVID-19, both overall and at a state level? Get the answers here, with data on hotspots and infection rates. This map tracks the history of coronavirus cases in America, both recent and all-time. Latest update on Jul 23
- New York
New York - US COVID-19 cases and deaths by state - USAFacts
- Arizona
Arizona - US COVID-19 cases and deaths by state - USAFacts
- Alaska
Alaska - US COVID-19 cases and deaths by state - USAFacts
- South Dakota
South Dakota - US COVID-19 cases and deaths by state -...
- South Carolina
South Carolina - US COVID-19 cases and deaths by state -...
- Georgia
Georgia - US COVID-19 cases and deaths by state - USAFacts
- Alabama
Alabama - US COVID-19 cases and deaths by state - USAFacts
- New York
According to the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) at Johns Hopkins University as of 19:21 Eastern Standard Time (EST) on August 7, 2021, the total COVID-19 cases in the US had crossed the 35.73 million mark, with the death toll reaching 616,712.
As of April 26, 2023, the total number of COVID-19 cases in the United States had reached over 104.5 million, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Testing for the...
- The Dictionary of Record
- Something Old, Something New
- The Language of Quarantining
- On The Watch List
- ‘Covid’ Or ‘Covid’?
The Oxford English Dictionary aspires to be the most extensive and complete recordof the language and its history. In 1884, parts of the first editionwere released. It wasn’t completed until 1928. Over the ensuing years, additional volumes of new words were published to supplement the first edition, and these were integrated into a second edition t...
The special, coronavirus-related updates give us a glimpse into how language can quickly change in the face of unprecedented social and economic disruption. For example, one of the effects of the pandemic is that it’s brought previously obscure medical terms to the forefront of everyday speech. Traditionally, dictionary editors include scientific a...
Terms related to social isolation existed long before the COVID-19 pandemic, but they’ve become much more common in 2020. Self-isolate, self-isolated and shelter in placeall received new citations to illustrate their current usage. Some terms have seen a shift in meaning. Originally, sheltering in place referred to seeking safety during a circumscr...
A perennial issue for lexicographers is deciding whether or not a term has enough staying power to be enshrined in the dictionary. The COVID-19 pandemic has produced its fair share of new terms that are blends of other words, and many of these are on the editors’ watch list. They include “maskne,” an acne outbreak caused by facial coverings; “zoomb...
And what of COVID-19 itself? According to the dictionary’s editors, it first appeared in a Feb. 11 World Health Organization situation reportas shorthand for “coronavirus disease 2019.” But should it be written as COVID-19 or as Covid-19? The dictionary’s editors report regional differences for this termas well. “COVID” is dominant in the U.S., Can...
Sep 10, 2021 · Between 2009 and 2014, the percentage of ELs in K-12 grew in more than half of the states, some having more than a 40 percent increase. In the 2014-2015 academic year, 10 percent of the K-12 ...
In the United States, there have been 103,436,829 [3] confirmed cases of COVID-19 with 1,204,625 [3] confirmed deaths, the most of any country, and the 17th highest per capita worldwide. [42] The COVID-19 pandemic ranks as the deadliest disaster in the country's history. [43]
May 27, 2020 · Fast forward four months and the virus has spread across all 50 states, leaving a death toll of 100,000 from more than 1.6 million confirmed cases. We've taken a look at how those figures...