Magazine Humboldt Kosmos
Forget the grammar you learn at school
Today’s broken rules are often tomorrow’s norms. The Hungarian linguist Vilmos Ágel has developed a completely new grammar.
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Magazine Humboldt Kosmos
Today’s broken rules are often tomorrow’s norms. The Hungarian linguist Vilmos Ágel has developed a completely new grammar.
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Magazine Humboldt Kosmos
Wilfred Fritz managed to carve his path through racial barriers and became one of the first non-whites to study at the South African Stellenbosch University.
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Magazine Humboldt Kosmos
The information scientist Hadas Shema argues for recognising online commentaries as a component of quality assurance.
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Magazine Humboldt Kosmos
It seems likely that racism could be the reason for police violence but, so far, no-one has published any scientific studies on the issue.
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Magazine Humboldt Kosmos
In his book “Die verborgene Natur der Liebe” (The Hidden Nature of Love), the historian of biology Thomas Junker reveals that we are still creatures of nature.
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Magazine Humboldt Kosmos
Goethe, Schiller, Fontane and then what? The Egyptian Germanist Hebatallah Fathy wants to enrich German teaching in Germany.
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Magazine Humboldt Kosmos
As a Humboldt Research Fellow Qiang Guo visited the Foundation’s Annual Meeting in Berlin and Schloss Bellevue. He came back with a selfie with Frank-Walter Steinmeier, at least almost.
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Magazine Humboldt Kosmos
To build robots that can deal with everyday tasks and situations just as well and as efficiently as people can – that is Oliver Brock’s mission.
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Magazine Humboldt Kosmos
In her “Social Maps” project the computer scientist Laura Leal-Taixé wants to integrate social information into digital maps.
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Magazine Humboldt Kosmos
“I love the feeling of discovering something nobody has ever discovered before,” says Karen Radner, describing what drives her as a researcher.
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