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The school offers undergraduate and graduate degrees in pedagogy and linguistic studies in Arabic, English, French, German, Japanese, Korean, Mandarin Chinese, Russian, and Southeast Asian. [1] The college is located at VNU Cau Giay campus. [2] ULIS was originally known as the School of Foreign Languages until the 1950s.
Ural Federal University, named after the first President of Russia, Boris Yeltsin, (Уральский федеральный университет имени первого Президента России Б.Н. Ельцина, Uralʹskiĭ federalʹnyĭ universitet imeni pervogo Prezidenta Rossii B.N. Yelʹtsina, often shortened to UrFU, УрФУ) is an educational institution in the Ural ...
It was founded in 1948 as Minsk State Pedagogical Institute for Foreign Languages [2] and today is considered the flagship university in Belarus for language education and translator training. [ 3 ] In addition to degree programs and continuous education courses aimed at local students, MSLU also offers both short courses and degree programs ...
The University is organised into 8 faculties: Roman & German Philology, Journalism, Translation Studies, Russian Philology and three English faculties, English Philology faculty and offers bachelor, master degrees in language-related fields.
In April 1954, HUFS was founded as a college for studying foreign languages in by Kim Heung-bae with its first students studying English, French, Chinese, German, Spanish and Russian. Polish President Bronisław Komorowski giving a lecture at Hankuk University, October 2013.
Moscow State University (MSU), officially M. V. Lomonosov Moscow State University, [a] is a public research university in Moscow, Russia. [3] The university includes 15 research institutes, 43 faculties, more than 300 departments, and six branches.
Kyrgyz-Russian Slavic University named after Boris Yeltsin (Russian: Кыргызско-Российский Славянский университет имени Бориса Ельцина) is a university which is jointly operated by the Kyrgyz government and the Government of Russia, located in city of Bishkek, the capital of Kyrgyzstan.
The university originates in the Moscow Higher Courses for Women founded by Vladimir Guerrier in 1872. It was subsequently reconstituted several times. In 1918 it admitted men and became the Second Moscow State University, then was reformed without its Medical and Chemical Technology schools as the Moscow State Pedagogical Institute, which for a time was known as the Moscow State V. I. Lenin ...