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8411 results for: ‘✅(出售各类实名注册卡:saolei44)如何注册quora账号.NUMIRW’

  • Research students

    Browse a list of Psychology and Vision Science research students. Find out more about our PhD and PsyD students and their research interests, alongside ways to get in touch.

  • Thank You For The Music: Student scholars celebrate community support

    Speaking at the event, University President and Vice-Chancellor, Professor Nishan Canagarajah, described the Guild as “valued members of the University family”.

  • Trauma-informed ESOL for refugees: self-access training and workshop

    Access free trauma informed pedagogy training for ESOL and EAP practitioners who teach English to people from refugee backgrounds

  • House style guide

    The University of Leicester’s style guide is a tool aimed at providing staff with a consistent approach when writing or editing for the University of Leicester as part of its brand guidelines. Some of these points are generally accepted punctuation rules.

  • Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy

    Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Leicester is provided by three state of the art, high resolution (solution state) instruments.

  • Politics of the International Drug Trade

    Module code: PL3142 The illegal drug trade has been estimated to take up almost 1% of all trade on Earth.

  • Politics of the International Drug Trade

    Module code: PL3142 The illegal drug trade has been estimated to take up almost 1% of all trade on Earth.

  • Politics of the International Drug Trade

    Module code: PL3142 The illegal drug trade has been estimated to take up almost 1% of all trade on Earth.

  • Subject search

    Browse the East Midlands Oral History Archive by searching by specific subject, or by browsing our list of subjects available.

  • Groundbreaking research identifies what makes human brains – and humans – unique in the animal world

    A neuroscientist at the University of Leicester has identified a fundamental difference between human and animal brains. This breakthrough, published today in the journal Cell, offers an explanation for what makes Homo sapiens so vastly different from even our nearest relatives.

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