What with the prospect of further resets with the European Union, and with British culture seemingly in a constant ...
Many of the words we commonly use in our day-to-day lives carry a piece of history with them. In linguistics, these are called 'Eponyms,' which are words that are derived from the name of a person who ...
India Today on MSN
India and Iran: Blood Is Thicker Than Babel
From "madar" and "matr" to "haft" and "sapta", the scores of parallels between Persian and Sanskrit are more than coincidence. They are linguistic reminders of a shared civilisation that is 4,000 ...
I've known about Davos, the World Economic Forum's annual conference that gathers the global elite, for my entire 16-year ...
I've known about Davos, the World Economic Forum's annual conference that gathers the global elite, for my entire 16-year ...
Now the 60-year-old “Anatolian Swabian”, as he dubs himself, has led the Greens to a surprise victory over the conservative Christian Democrats (cdu) in his home state of Baden-Württemberg on March ...
The Soviet Union didn’t only fight the Third Reich on the battlefield. Huge resources were committed to the propaganda war in a bid to force Nazis to give up - or even take up arms against Hitler.
Jacobin on MSN
Die Linke’s Fight to Win Back Working-Class Germans
The night of last February’s German election, Christian Democratic Union leader Friedrich Merz said that Europe had to become more “independent” of the United States. The year since has shown that he ...
Today's NYT Wordle lands with puzzle #1727, and this Thursday challenge delivers a straightforward challenge with common letters but a double consonant that could catch players off guard.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results